Police said the rockets landed in open areas and there were no reports of
damage or injuries. People in northern Israel were asked to head to bomb
shelters. Israel responded with artillery fire into south Lebanon, witnesses
said.
Security sources in Lebanon said five rockets were fired but two fell short of
the Israeli border.
The attacks come as UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon travelled to the Middle
East on a tour aimed at pressuring Israel and Hamas into a lasting ceasefire.
Mr Ban is scheduled to meet Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak as part of
diplomatic efforts to end the conflict, which has killed almost 1,000 people.
He will then visit Israel and the West Bank as well as other regional powers.
But the UN chief is not scheduled to meet representatives of Hamas - which
controls the Gaza Strip - and it is not clear whether he will go to Gaza
itself during his week-long trip, the BBC reports.
Four rockets were fired on northern Israel last Thursday. Lebanon's Hezbollah
guerrilla group denied responsibility and speculation focused on small
Palestinian groups in Lebanon.
Israeli officials have expressed concern that militants in Lebanon could try
to open a second front in the Gaza campaign in solidarity with Hamas.
Police said the latest rockets hit near the near the northern town of Kiryat
Shemona.
