Two 107 millimeter-diameter Katyusha rockets landed in the northern town of Kiryat Shmona Sunday afternoon. No injuries were reported. At around 5:20 pm, residents of the northern town reported the sound of explosions. Rescue teams were dispatched to both locations where the rockets landed. It remains unclear who launched the rockets towards Israel. One of the rockets hit a car in the town's northern industrial area, and the other landed in the southern part of town. IDF officials said that the rockets were apparently launched from an area very close to UN outposts in southern Lebanon. Residents were instructed to carry on with their day following an IDF evaluation, which concluded there appeared to be no further threat. The Lebanese media reported that the rockets were launched from villages in the Marjayoun District in south Lebanon. Hizbullah’s Al Manar television station briefly reported the attack based on Israeli news outlets Hizbullah denied it was behind the attack. Al Manar also said that the IDF was currently firing mortar shells at the Shebaa Farms area in southern Lebanon. The Northern Command estimated that the rockets were launched by a Palestinian organization operating in southern Lebanon, but did not rule out the possibility that the rockets belonged to Hizbullah. However, other military source said the rockets were not launched by Hizbullah, but by Palestinian organizations. Lebanese journalists also estimated that a Palestinian organization was behind the attack as part of a struggle taking place near the border between extremist organizations and the Lebanese military. They indicated that the “Fatah al-Islam” organization has said that its goal was to fight “the Zionists”. Police sappers told Ynet the rockets launched were of a very primitive variety. “During the Second Lebanon War, only a small number of these rockets were fired. Their range is short, so they were fired close to the fence,” police sources said. Another source added, “From what we know of Hizbullah and its firing methods, it wasn’t Hizbullah. In the past, when there was tension in Gaza, we witnessed similar attacks from points near the fence, so it was probably a Palestinian organization that fired the rockets.” “We were surprised by the rockets. Their origins are still not clear. I’m in contact with the security division in town, as well as with IDF representatives, and we will follow any order the army issues. I hope this issue is soon brought to the attention of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert who is in the United States, so that he can bring it up in Washington,” said Kiryat Shmona Mayor Haim Barbivai. A Kiryat Shmona resident, Eshkol Levy, told Ynet, "I heard and witnessed the landing of two Katyushas, one in the town's northern industrial area. There was no warning." Hagai Einav, Sharon Roffe-Ofir, Ahiya Raved, Roee Nahmias, Ali Waked, Meital Yasur-Beit Or, Roi Mandel and Hanan Greenberg contributed to the report