Missile fired by Yemen's Houthis lands near Israel's main airport
BEN GURION AIRPORT, Israel - A missile fired by Yemen's Houthi rebels towards Israel on May 4 landed near Ben Gurion Airport, the country's main international airport, sending a plume of smoke into the air and causing panic among passengers in the terminal building.
Yemen's Iran-aligned Houthis, who claimed responsibility for the missile strike, have recently intensified missile launches at Israel, saying they are acting in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza.
A senior Israeli police commander Yair Hetzroni showed reporters a crater caused by the impact of the missile, which airport authorities said had landed beside a road near a Terminal 3 parking lot.
'You can see the scene right behind us here, a hole that opened up with a diametre of tens of metres and also tens of metres deep,' he said, adding that there was no significant damage.
In a statement after the strike, Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said: 'Whoever harms us will be harmed sevenfold.'
Sirens were activated across central Israel in the minutes before it fell, including nearby in the major city of Tel Aviv.
A Reuters reporter at the airport, which is located between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, heard sirens and saw passengers reacting by running towards safe rooms.
Several people at the airport posted videos filmed on smartphones that showed a plume of black smoke clearly visible nearby, behind parked aircraft and airport buildings. Reuters has not verified the videos.
The Israeli ambulance service said eight people were being taken to hospital, including a man in a mild to moderate condition with injuries to his limbs and two women in a mild condition with head injuries.
A spokesperson for the Israel Airports Authority said takeoffs and landings had resumed and operations at Ben Gurion had returned to normal, after reports of air traffic being halted and access routes to the airport being blocked.
However, flight operations were disrupted due to the missile, according to Ben Gurion's live air traffic site.
Some flights, including by Air India, TUS Airways and Lufthansa Group, were cancelled. Others, including to US airports Newark and JFK, were delayed by about 90 minutes. A Reuters reporter boarded a flight to Dubai that was running on time.
US strikes on Houthis
Claiming responsibility for the strike, the Houthis' military spokesperson Yahya Saree reiterated a warning to airlines that the Israeli airport was 'no longer safe for air travel'.
The Houthi missile strike comes after US President Donald Trump in March ordered large-scale strikes against the rebels to reduce their capabilities and deter them from targeting commercial shipping in the Red Sea.
The Houthis, who control swathes of Yemen, began targeting Israel and Red Sea shipping in late 2023, during the early days of the war between Hamas and Israel in the Gaza Strip.
The war was triggered by Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel on Oct 7, 2023, in which 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken hostage. Israel's offensive on Gaza has killed more than 50,000 Palestinians and destroyed much of the coastal enclave.
The Houthis pledged to expand their range of targets in Israel in retaliation for a renewed Israeli offensive in Gaza launched in mid-March, breaking a two-month-old ceasefire.
The US strikes on the rebel group, which have killed hundreds of people in Yemen, have been the biggest US military operation in the Middle East since Mr Trump took office in January. REUTERS
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