Berliner Boersenzeitung - Iran missiles hit southern Israel, injuring more than 100

EUR -
AED 4.330578
AFN 75.468553
ALL 95.370831
AMD 434.26718
ANG 2.110613
AOA 1082.496254
ARS 1649.279971
AUD 1.625347
AWG 2.125489
AZN 2.009303
BAM 1.955202
BBD 2.368676
BDT 144.305864
BGN 1.967008
BHD 0.444064
BIF 3500.4294
BMD 1.179189
BND 1.491244
BOB 8.126515
BRL 5.795828
BSD 1.17604
BTN 111.057033
BWP 15.789171
BYN 3.323484
BYR 23112.111202
BZD 2.365277
CAD 1.612129
CDF 2670.864298
CHF 0.916177
CLF 0.026704
CLP 1050.508704
CNY 8.019372
CNH 8.014083
COP 4394.855841
CRC 540.634648
CUC 1.179189
CUP 31.248518
CVE 110.231286
CZK 24.334582
DJF 209.425947
DKK 7.476537
DOP 69.938609
DZD 156.038276
EGP 62.195977
ERN 17.68784
ETB 183.631137
FJD 2.574218
FKP 0.865474
GBP 0.864889
GEL 3.154379
GGP 0.865474
GHS 13.247948
GIP 0.865474
GMD 86.674958
GNF 10318.844
GTQ 8.979254
GYD 246.064742
HKD 9.234999
HNL 31.264438
HRK 7.538916
HTG 153.972908
HUF 353.981307
IDR 20491.303919
ILS 3.421187
IMP 0.865474
INR 111.345548
IQD 1540.628801
IRR 1546506.829043
ISK 143.873347
JEP 0.865474
JMD 185.35331
JOD 0.836092
JPY 184.753623
KES 151.883547
KGS 103.085327
KHR 4718.556838
KMF 492.90156
KPW 1061.251335
KRW 1723.751231
KWD 0.36279
KYD 0.9801
KZT 543.543758
LAK 25791.111834
LBP 105315.489444
LKR 378.634195
LRD 215.803997
LSL 19.293799
LTL 3.48184
LVL 0.71328
LYD 7.436725
MAD 10.75591
MDL 20.110849
MGA 4912.497521
MKD 61.621153
MMK 2476.100645
MNT 4223.124889
MOP 9.4824
MRU 47.006623
MUR 55.210091
MVR 18.163925
MWK 2038.876413
MXN 20.255648
MYR 4.623647
MZN 75.362436
NAD 19.293799
NGN 1609.593864
NIO 43.276764
NOK 10.859513
NPR 177.691653
NZD 1.976185
OMR 0.453611
PAB 1.17604
PEN 4.066156
PGK 5.193412
PHP 71.358689
PKR 327.765953
PLN 4.239717
PYG 7183.802847
QAR 4.298685
RON 5.21945
RSD 117.334114
RUB 87.543025
RWF 1724.072695
SAR 4.44258
SBD 9.456429
SCR 17.539736
SDG 708.107537
SEK 10.86706
SGD 1.494509
SHP 0.880384
SLE 29.067455
SLL 24727.006491
SOS 672.094441
SRD 44.100547
STD 24406.83871
STN 24.492509
SVC 10.290853
SYP 130.375396
SZL 19.281103
THB 37.973479
TJS 10.972544
TMT 4.127163
TND 3.415955
TOP 2.839205
TRY 53.473293
TTD 7.970562
TWD 36.927538
TZS 3063.662984
UAH 51.6595
UGX 4406.652233
USD 1.179189
UYU 46.905654
UZS 14265.63688
VES 588.693738
VND 31022.113342
VUV 139.685143
WST 3.192143
XAF 655.756438
XAG 0.014675
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.186819
XCG 2.119552
XDR 0.815551
XOF 655.756438
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.384102
ZAR 19.315959
ZMK 10614.123377
ZMW 22.390152
ZWL 379.698489
  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.15

    0%

  • BCC

    -2.0900

    70.67

    -2.96%

  • BCE

    -0.4300

    24.14

    -1.78%

  • BTI

    0.2000

    58.28

    +0.34%

  • CMSD

    0.1140

    23.534

    +0.48%

  • RIO

    2.2700

    105.38

    +2.15%

  • NGG

    0.9800

    86.89

    +1.13%

  • RBGPF

    0.7000

    63.61

    +1.1%

  • GSK

    -0.0900

    50.41

    -0.18%

  • CMSC

    0.1400

    23.11

    +0.61%

  • VOD

    0.5100

    16.2

    +3.15%

  • BP

    -0.4700

    43.34

    -1.08%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4100

    16.37

    -2.5%

  • AZN

    0.3300

    182.85

    +0.18%

  • RELX

    0.0759

    33.58

    +0.23%

Iran missiles hit southern Israel, injuring more than 100
Iran missiles hit southern Israel, injuring more than 100 / Photo: Ilia YEFIMOVICH - AFP

Iran missiles hit southern Israel, injuring more than 100

Two Iranian missiles struck southern Israel on Saturday, injuring more than 100 people in the most destructive attack of the three-week war, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowing to retaliate "on all fronts".

Text size:

The strikes tore open the facades of residential buildings and carved craters into the ground.

First responders said 75 people were injured in the town of Arad, 10 of them seriously. Hours earlier, 33 were wounded in nearby Dimona, where AFPTV footage showed a large hole gouged into the ground next to piles of rubble and twisted metal.

Dimona hosts a facility widely believed to be the site of the Middle East's only nuclear arsenal, although Israel has never admitted to possessing nuclear weapons.

The Israeli army told AFP there had been a "direct missile hit on a building" in Dimona, with casualties reported at multiple sites, including a 10-year-old boy in serious condition with shrapnel wounds.

In Arad, emergency workers combed through the rubble of heavily damaged buildings.

Netanyahu vowed to continue striking Iran after what he called a "very difficult evening".

Iran said the targeting of Dimona was retaliation for Israeli strikes on its Natanz nuclear facility.

Following the Natanz attack, UN nuclear watchdog chief Rafael Grossi reiterated his call for "military restraint to avoid any risk of a nuclear accident".

The Natanz facility hosts underground centrifuges used to enrich uranium for Iran's disputed nuclear programme and sustained damage in the June 2025 war.

Asked about Natanz, the Israeli military said it was "not aware of a strike".

The Israeli military also said Saturday it had struck a facility inside a Tehran university "utilised by the Iranian terror regime's military industries and ballistic missile array to develop nuclear weapon components and weapons".

- Hormuz base -

The destruction in Israel capped three weeks of heavy US-Israeli bombardment that appeared to have done little to blunt Iran's ability to retaliate with missile and drone attacks across the region.

The United Arab Emirates said Saturday it faced aerial attacks after Iran warned it against allowing strikes from its territory on disputed islands near the strategic Strait of Hormuz.

Iran has choked off the vital waterway, which is used for a fifth of global crude trade during peacetime.

US Central Command chief Admiral Brad Cooper said American warplanes had dropped 5,000-pound bombs on an underground Iranian coastal facility storing anti-ship cruise missiles and mobile launchers, leaving Tehran's ability to threaten the waterway "degraded".

The strike also destroyed "intelligence support sites and missile radar relays" used to monitor ship movements, Cooper said.

A statement from the leaders of mainly European countries, including the UK, France, Italy and Germany, but also South Korea, Australia, the UAE and Bahrain, meanwhile condemned the "de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz by Iranian forces".

"We express our readiness to contribute to appropriate efforts to ensure safe passage through the Strait," they said.

US President Donald Trump has slammed NATO allies as "cowards" and urged them to secure the strait.

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Tehran had only imposed restrictions on vessels from countries involved in attacks against Iran, and would offer assistance to others that stayed out of the conflict.

The standoff in the strait has sent crude oil prices soaring, with a barrel of North Sea Brent crude up more than 50 percent over the past month and now comfortably more than $105.

- Remarkable endurance? -

Analysts say Iran's Islamic government has survived the loss of its top leaders and that its strike capacity is proving more durable than expected.

"They're showing a lot of resilience that we didn't perhaps expect, that the US didn't expect, when it took this on," Neil Quilliam of Chatham House told the London-based think tank's podcast.

Tehran, meanwhile, marked the end of Ramadan as the war was entering its fourth week.

Iran's supreme leader traditionally leads Eid al-Fitr prayers, but Mojtaba Khamenei, who came to power earlier this month after his father Ali Khamenei was killed, has remained out of the public eye.

Instead, the head of the judiciary, Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejei, attended prayers at central Tehran's overflowing Imam Khomeini grand mosque.

"The atmosphere of the New Year was spreading through the city," said Farid, an advertising executive reached by AFP through an online message.

But "the thought that some people could be dying right at the New Year dinner table was painful", he added.

- Diego Garcia -

Iran launched a ballistic-missile attack on the US-UK base on Diego Garcia, an island in the Indian Ocean around 4,000 kilometres (2,500 miles) from Iran, which a UK official told AFP was "unsuccessful."

Had the salvo reached its target it would have been the longest-range Iranian strike yet.

Israel's military chief Eyal Zamir said Iran had used a "two-stage intercontinental ballistic missile with a range of 4,000 kilometers," adding in a televised statement: "These missiles are not intended to strike Israel. Their range reaches European capitals."

The attack "shows that they can still move these mobile launchers around, undetected, spin up and fire without being struck," former Royal Navy commander Tom Sharpe told AFP.

burs-arp/acb

(O.Joost--BBZ)