An attack from inside Syria today killed a 13-year-old Israeli boy on the occupied Golan Heights, the first fatality on Israel's side of the frontier since the Syrian civil war began, relatives and the military said.
Israeli tanks fired at Syrian army positions in response to what an Israeli military spokesman described as an intentional attack.
The Defence Ministry said the teenager, an Arab citizen of Israel from a village in Galilee, had accompanied his father, one of the ministry's civilian contractors, to the Golan, and that two other people were wounded in the incident.
Israeli officials initially said the boy, Mohammed Qaraqara, was 15. Relatives said he was 13. "He was an excellent student, everyone loved him," his cousin Salah Qaraqara (52) said.
A military spokesman said it was not yet clear whether a roadside bomb or an artillery shell or mortar round, fired from Syria across the frontier fence on the Golan, had struck the water tanker in which the group had been travelling.
“This is the most substantial event that we have had on the border with Syria since the beginning of the [Syrian civil] war,” the spokesman said.
Shelling from the Syrian civil war has occasionally spilled over on to the Golan, including what Israel has said were deliberate attacks on its troops. Israel captured the plateau from Syria in a 1967 war and annexed it in a move that is not internationally recognised.
While the Syrian army has a presence on the Golan, some areas are controlled by rebels fighting to topple President Bashar al-Assad, including al Qaeda-inspired militants hostile to the Jewish state. – (Reuters)