Reuters
Oluşturulma Tarihi: Ocak 14, 2009 00:00
JERUSALEM - Israeli troops at a border crossing with Jordan came under fire from the kingdom yesterday, the Israeli military said, but Amman quickly denied the report.
"Troops were fired upon from the Jordanian side of the border. It was unclear who the gunmen were," an Israeli spokeswoman said about the incident, which came 18 days into Israel's deadly offensive in the isolated Gaza Strip. No one was injured, she said.
The troops, who were patrolling near a border crossing with Jordan in southern Israel, returned fire, the spokeswoman said.
Jordan's Petra news agency said: "A military source in the General Command of the Jordanian armed forces denied ... that shots had been fired from the Jordanian side on the Western border, affirming that there is no truth to this information."
On Sunday, Israeli troops in the Golan Heights had come under fire from Syria. Jordan signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1994, becoming the second Arab state to do so, after Egypt.
Most of Jordan's five million citizens are of Palestinian origin, they or their parents having been expelled or fled to Jordan in the fighting that accompanied the creation of Israel in 1948.
Israel's Border Police opened an investigation into the shooting.