Gaza - Mohammed Habib
Two rockets fired from the Palestinian Gaza Strip have hit Eshkol in southern Israel overnight, according to Israeli police spokesman Louba Samri.
No casualties had been reported after rockets landed on open uninhabited areas in the western Negev region.
Alarms were not sounded by Israeli authorities on Thursday night.
No group has immediately claimed responsibility for the latest attack.
The Gaza-Israel border has been largely quiet since November when an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire ended a deadly eight-day confrontation between the Jewish state and militants of the Islamist movement Hamas which rules the territory.
But since late February, there have been more than four other cases of rocket fire on Israel, including ones claimed by hardline Salafist militants to which Israel has responded with air strikes on Gaza.
On April 8 the Israeli army closed the Kerem Shalom goods crossing into the Gaza Strip, a day after a rocket was fired from the besieged enclave and hit an uninhabited area of Israel's southern Negev desert.
That attack came as US Secretary of State John Kerry started a visit for talks with Israeli and Palestinian leaders.
Two rockets fired on Wednesday at Israel's Red Sea resort of Eilat were claimed by a Salafist group.
Israel said Wednesday's rockets, which caused no casualties, were fired from Egypt's Sinai Peninsula but there was no confirmation from Cairo.