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Scores dead in first major ground battle in Gaza

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) - The first major ground battle in two weeks of Israel-Hamas fighting exacted a steep price Sunday: It killed 65 Palestinians and 13 Israeli soldiers and forced thousands of terrified Palestinian civilians to flee their neighborhood, reportedly used to launch rockets at Israel and now devastated by the fighting.

 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the offensive would continue "as long as necessary" to end attacks from Gaza on Israeli civilians.

But Hamas seems defiant, international cease-fire efforts are stalled, and international criticism is becoming more vocal as the death toll among Palestinian civilians rises.

 

U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon called Israel's latest incursion "atrocious," and said it must do far more to protect civilians. Several diplomats said the U.N. Security Council would hold an emergency session Sunday night at 9:30 p.m. local time (0130 GMT) at the request of council member Jordan on the situation in Gaza.

 

In Israel, public opinion will struggle to tolerate rising military losses in an open-ended campaign. Already, Sunday's deaths marked the highest number of soldiers killed on a single day since Israel's war in Lebanon in 2006.

The ferocious battle in Gaza City's Shijaiyah neighborhood came on the third day of Israel's ground offensive, which had been preceded by a 10-day air campaign.

 

In all, at least 432 Palestinians were killed and more than 3,000 wounded in the past two weeks. The overall death toll on the Israeli side rose to 20, including 18 soldiers, along with dozens of wounded troops, during that period.

On Sunday evening, Hamas spokesman Mushir al-Masri in Gaza claimed his group had captured an Israeli soldier. An announcement on Gaza TV of the soldier's capture set off celebration in the streets of Gaza City.

But the claim could not immediately be verified and the Israeli military said it was investigating the report. Hamas has made similar claims of capturing Israelis in the past that were not true. For Israelis, a captured soldier would be a nightmare scenario. Hamas-allied militants seized an Israeli soldier in a cross-border raid in 2006 and held him captive in Gaza until Israel traded more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners, some of whom were involved in grisly killings, for his return in 2011.

Sunday's battle began when Israeli troops backed by tanks entered the densely populated Shijaiyah district just after midnight Sunday. They were met by a "huge" level of resistance by Hamas fighters who fired anti-tank missiles, rocket-propelled grenades and automatic weapons from houses and buildings, said Lt. Col. Peter Lerner, an army spokesman.

Residents said they came under intense Israeli tank fire.

"The gate of hell has opened, and shrapnel came through the windows," Shijaiyah resident Jawad Hassanain said by phone. He and his family fled to a nearby building after their house shook from explosions.

After daybreak, the extent of the devastation slowly became apparent: At least 65 Palestinians had been killed and nearly 300 wounded, Gaza health officials said, while dozens of homes badly damaged or destroyed.

Casualties were rushed to Gaza's central Shifa Hospital. Wailing parents, some covered with blood or dust from debris, carried children peppered by shrapnel, and the emergency room quickly overflowed, forcing doctors to treat some patients in a hallway.

During a brief Red Cross-brokered lull later in the day, rescue workers toured the neighborhood to retrieve the dead, pulling bodies from the rubble of homes.

In a last sweep of the area on Sunday afternoon, rescue workers heard the faint voice of a woman in the rubble of a house.

"I'm here with my husband and niece," the woman said, adding that there were also three bodies near her. "I'm here under the shop. God please, I can't breathe."

In the incident witnessed by Associated Press journalists, rescue workers tried to organize a bulldozer, but the situation was deemed too dangerous and the crew left. Later, the rescue workers returned with a bulldozer, after coordination with Israeli forces through the Red Crescent, and pulled the three from the rubble, said Said Hamam, a member of the rescue services.

The 13 Israeli soldiers were killed in several separate incidents in Shijaiya, including gun battles and rocket attacks. In the deadliest, Gaza fighters detonated a bomb near an armored personnel carrier, killing seven soldiers inside, the army said. In another incident, three soldiers were killed when they became trapped in a burning building, it said.

Despite the losses, the army chief, Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz, said Israel intends escalate the operation. Gaza residents received automated phone calls late Sunday, warning them to evacuate refugee camps in the center of the Gaza Strip.

Israel had launched the campaign to hurt Hamas' ability to fire rockets and to destroy tunnels dug by the militants to sneak into Israel to carry out attacks.

Shijaiyah was targeted as a Hamas stronghold and because 8 percent of more than 1,700 rockets fired at Israel since July 8 were launched from there, said Lerner.

The military said that since the beginning of ground operation late last week, it has killed 110 Gaza fighters and targeted more than 1,000 sites linked to militants. Soldiers also exposed 14 tunnels, all interconnected and leading toward Israel, and detonated six of them, including one with a length of 1.2 kilometers and an access point within a house, the army said.

"It's like the Underground, the Metro or the subway," said Lerner, the army spokesman, referring to the tunnel system.

The first days of the current ground offensive were in marked contrast to Israel's last major invasion of Gaza in January 2009, known in Israel as Cast Lead, when Hamas fighters rarely engaged Israeli forces.

Now, Gaza's militants seem better armed, including with anti-tank rockets.

"I see an escalation in weaponry," Amos Yadlin, a former Israeli military intelligence chief, told Israel TV's Channel 10. "This isn't the same weaponry as in Cast Lead."

Netanyahu said in nationally televised comments Sunday that the ground campaign is vital to Israel's security because the tunnels could be used for "mega terror attacks and kidnappings," but acknowledged the operation is "full of risks."

Speaking earlier to CNN, Netanyahu said the ultimate goal is to "restore a sustainable quiet" for Israel's citizens. Once that is achieved, he said he hopes to enlist the international community "to demilitarize Gaza," but did not explain what that would entail.

Asked about the mounting number of dead and wounded among Palestinians, he said Israel is only targeting militants.

"All civilian casualties are unintended by us, but intended by Hamas. They want to pile up as many civilian dead as they can. ... It's gruesome," Netanyahu said. "They use telegenically dead Palestinians for their cause. They want the more dead the better."

Meanwhile, a speedy cease-fire seems elusive, as the U.S. and some of the regional powers disagree on how to resolve the Israel-Hamas conflict.

Hamas rejected Egypt's proposal last week that both sides halt fire and then discuss a possible easing of the Gaza border blockade, enforced by Israel and Egypt since Hamas seized Gaza in 2007.

For Hamas, easing the blockade is key to survival, after an intensified border closure of Gaza by Egypt in the past year drove the movement into a crippling financial crisis. Hamas has insisted on guarantees concerning the blockade before it stops fighting and has demanded that others, including Qatar, join Egypt as a mediator.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry sided with Israel and Egypt on Sunday, saying giving in to Hamas' conditions for a cease-fire would mean rewarding terrorism. Kerry told NBC's "Meet The Press" that he will head to the Middle East in coming days to help with cease-fire efforts. He said Israel "has every right in the world to defend itself" from attacks by Hamas militants in Gaza.

Qatar is seen as more sympathetic to Hamas.

Qatari Foreign Minister Khalid al-Attiya said after a meeting with U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon that it is not important which country achieves the terms of a cease-fire so long as justice is achieved.

"We condemn the acts of aggression that Israel has carried out against the Palestinian people, and most recently the massacre of Shijaiyah today in which most of those killed were children," said al-Attiya.

Ban's had harsh words for Israel's military operation, while reiterating his call for an immediate cease-fire.

"While I was en route to Doha, dozens more civilians, including children, have been killed in Israeli military strikes in the Shijaiyah neighborhood in Gaza," he said.

"I condemn this atrocious action. Israel must exercise maximum restraint and do far more to protect civilians," he said.

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Gaza: thousands flee homes amid fiercest fighting of 13-day war

Israel dramatically widens offensive, sending tanks and troops into urban areas in Gaza
Israeli tanks near Gaza
Israeli tanks along the border with Gaza: Israeli forces have hit eastern Gaza City with the heaviest bombardment yet of the conflict. Photograph: Baz Ratner/Reuters
 

The fiercest fighting of the 13-day war in Gaza has erupted as Israel dramatically widened its ground offensive, sending tanks and troops into urban areas and causing thousands of civilians to flee.

 

Images of the corpses of women and children were posted on Facebook as hospitals were overwhelmed with the dead, injured and those seeking sanctuary from the onslaught.

 

People ran from their homes, some barefoot and nearly all empty-handed. Others crowded on to the backs of trucks or rode on the bonnets of cars in a desperate attempt to flee. Some described the bombardment of the Shujai'iya neighbourhood as a massacre.

 

The Israeli military also suffered casualties, with at least 26 wounded soldiers evacuated. There were unconfirmed reports that Hamas militants had killed a number of Israeli soldiers in a cross-border attack on Sunday morning.

 

Witnesses reported hearing small arms fire inside Gaza, indicating gun battles on the streets. Heavy shelling continued from the air and sea.

 

Israel sent more troops into Gaza overnight after demolishing more than a dozen Hamas tunnels and intensifying tank fire on border areas.

 

 

Late on Saturday evening, Israeli forces hit eastern areas of Gaza City with the heaviest bombardment yet of the 13-day war. The assault was most intense in the direction of the Shujai'iya neighbourhood, where a constant orange glow of flames lit up the sky.

 

As the assault continued into Sunday morning, Israel disclosed that four of its soldiers had been killed in the ground offensive.

 

At one stage, artillery and mortar rounds were hitting the outskirts of the city every five seconds. Later in the night, jets flew low passes over the coast.

 

As Sunday dawned, a thin pall of smoke hung over the seafront while tank fire echoed through deserted streets.

 

Large numbers of residents of the areas under attack fled the outskirts for Gaza's city centre, while residents called radio stations pleading for evacuation.

 

The UN said that more than 60,000 people had sought sanctuary in 49 shelters it was providing in Gaza, and it expected the numbers to rise.

 

An Israeli air strike on the house of Khalil al-Hayya, a senior Hamas official, killed his son and daughter-in-law and two other children, hospital officials said. Shelling also killed four Palestinians near the southern town of Rafah, officials said.

 

Lt-Col Peter Lerner of the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) said additional troops had been sent into Gaza on the orders of the government. "Forces have undergone an intensified training and thorough planning period and are prepared and stand ready for the task at hand," he said.

 

Since the start of Israel-Hamas fighting almost two weeks ago, 348 Palestinians have been killed and 2,700 wounded in Israeli air and artillery strikes, according to Palestinian health officials. A quarter of the deaths had been reported since the start of the ground offensive late on Thursday, they said.

 

The UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, headed to Qatar on Sunday as part of renewed ceasefire efforts. He was due to meet the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, in Doha.

 

Abbas was also expected to meet Khaled Meshaal, the Hamas leader based in the Qatari capital.

 

According to the Egyptian newspaper Aharam, the US secretary of state, John Kerry, was travelling to Cairo to help in the mediation effort.

 

Hamas last week rejected an Egyptian call for both sides to halt hostilities, insisting on advance guarantees that Israel and Egypt would significantly ease their border blockade of Gaza. Qatar has presented a ceasefire proposal incorporating Hamas's demands, but Egypt said on Saturday that it had no plans to revise its proposal.

 

Israel is opposed to Qatar's involvement, and insists that Egypt must be a party to any deal. Doha hosts a large number of exiled Islamists from across the Middle East, including Meshaal.

 

The French foreign minister, Laurent Fabius, who flew to Israel after meetings in Egypt and Jordan, said on Saturday that efforts to secure a ceasefire had failed. "Sadly I can say that the call for a ceasefire has not been heard, and on the contrary, there's a risk of more civilian casualties that worries us," he said following talks with the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu.

 

According to the Israeli military, its soldiers have uncovered 34 shafts leading into about a dozen underground tunnels, some as deep as 30 metres. Israel has said demolishing tunnels is the principal goal of its ground operation, and it released footage of them being demolished by excavators and air strikes.

 

The IDF reported three cross-border incidents on Saturday. The most serious involved 12 Palestinian militants disguised in Israeli uniforms who emerged from a tunnel in Israel to fire an anti-tank missile at Israeli troops, killing two and injuring several others.

 

They were "aiming to carry out a lethal attack" on a nearby Israeli community, the IDF said. The dead soldiers were named as Bar Rahav, 21, and Benayahu Rubel, 20.

 

At least one Palestinian was killed in the clash. Hamas said its fighters had taken some of the soldiers' weapons back to their hideouts.

 

In other confrontations, Palestinian gunmen emerged from tunnels and exchanged gunfire with Israeli soldiers. Two of the militants were killed, and another died when the explosive vest he was wearing went off, the military said.

 

In one incident, Hamas fighters carried tranquilisers and handcuffs, indicating they "intended to abduct Israelis", according to the military.

 

As the offensive intensified, electricity and water supplies in Gaza were increasingly disrupted.

 

The Gaza City municipality said a water main had been damaged, leaving parts of the city without supplies. Gaza has suffered from rolling blackouts for years, but periods without electricity have now increased to up to 20 hours a day.

FM

Quote (Ban Ki Moon)

 

"While I was en route to Doha, dozens more civilians, including children, have been killed in Israeli military strikes in the Shijaiyah neighborhood in Gaza," he said.

"I condemn this atrocious action. Israel must exercise maximum restraint and do far more to protect civilians," he said unquote

FM
Last edited by Former Member

Kerry due in Cairo as Israel intensifies ground war in Gaza

GazaÂĐReuters

Palestinians evacuate a wounded man after what police said  was an Israeli air strike on a house in Rafah in the Gaza  Strip

 

John Kerry, US secretary of state, is expected to travel  to Egypt on Monday in an effort to restore a 2012 ceasefire between Israel  and Hamas, a day after the most intense fighting yet in the near two-week war  claimed the lives of at least 60 Palestinians, many of them civilians in  Gaza.

Israel  stepped up its ground war against Islamic militants Hamas, expanding from a  limited operation targeting tunnel networks on the border to an assault on urban  areas inside Gaza, as it shelled the al-Shuja’iya neighbourhood in the east of  Gaza City on Sunday. The shelling of buildings left many dead or wounded.

Hamas  fighters fired back, engaging Israeli troops with rocket-propelled grenades and  gunfire. Journalists at the scene reported seeing dead and wounded in the  streets, some of whom could not be treated because of the intensity of the  fighting.

 

The UN Security Council held an emergency meeting and urged an immediate  ceasefire after Ban Ki-moon, secretary-general, described Israel’s shelling as “atrocious”.

Israel’s military said that 13 members of its elite Golani infantry brigade  had been killed in Sunday’s offensive.

Lieutenant-Colonel Peter Lerner, a military spokesman, said on Monday Israel  would take the offensive “one day at a time” as it seeks to stop Hamas firing  rockets across the border.

“We have to deal with the rockets and the rocket launchers,” he told the BBC. “Hamas must realise there’s a price for carrying out these attacks.”

Jen Psaki, US state department spokeswoman, said in a statement that the US  and its international partners “are deeply concerned about the risk of further  escalation, and the loss of more innocent life. We believe there should be a  ceasefire as soon as possible – one that restores the ceasefire reached in  November of 2012.”

Israel agreed to a two-hour humanitarian ceasefire to allow medical personnel  to attend to people injured in the fighting from 1:30pm on Sunday, which it  later extended by two hours.

The pro-Hamas al-Aqsa and al-Quds television channels carried distressing  footage of the dead and wounded lying in the streets, many of them children.  Palestinian health officials put the number of the day’s casualties across the  Gaza Strip as of Sunday afternoon at more than 80 dead and 210 wounded, but  ambulances were still arriving at Gaza City’s al-Shifa hospital and the numbers  rose as the day progressed.

Barack Obama, the US president, expressed concern over the rising casualties  on both sides in a telephone call with Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli premier,  on Sunday. Earlier, Mr Kerry had urged Hamas to “recognise their own  responsibility” and accept a ceasefire deal to halt what he called an “ugly” war.

The UN said thousands more people had fled their homes to seek refuge in  schools or other shelters because of the fighting. UNRWA, its Palestinian  refugee agency, said it was running short of funds to buy mattresses and  latrines.

“We have seen another massive increase in displacement from Shuja’iya, but  also in the east,” said Bob Turner, head of UNRWA’s Gaza field office. The UN  said it was sheltering 70,000 displaced people at 57 schools and that it was  running out of suitable buildings in north Gaza, where most of the fighting is  focused.

Rights campaigners and aid agencies warned of a worsening shortage of  drinking water and a sanitation crisis. Much of Gaza lacks electricity because  power lines were damaged during the Israeli military operation that began on  July 7. Municipal workers have been unable to repair facilities.

Israel’s military dropped leaflets and sent voice and text messages to  residents of Shuja’iya last week urging them to evacuate. Many remained either  because Hamas told them not to leave their homes or because previously such  warnings had not been followed by military action.

As images of the wounded and dead, and the destruction of buildings, in  Shuja’iya were published on news and social media sites on Sunday, the IDF said  in its Twitter feed: “Days ago we warned civilians in Shuja’iya to evacuate.  Hamas ordered them to stay. Hamas put them in the line of fire.”

The Israeli military, which accuses Hamas of using homes and other civilian  buildings to shield its military operations, also published a drawing showing a  rocket launcher on top of a civilian building, and militant fighters and rockets  in tunnels underneath a mosque.

 

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Venezuela condemns Israeli invasion of Gaza

 

 
Mon Jul 21, 2014 5:3AM GMT
 
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has condemned Israel’s invasion of the Gaza Strip, saying the Tel Aviv regime is committing genocide against the Palestinians.

Maduro made the remarks on Sunday, comparing the Israeli invasion of the besieged Gaza Strip to an “extermination.”

In addition, Maduro said the Israeli actions against Gaza could not be justified as like-for-like warfare.

“Venezuela also rejects the cynical campaigns trying to condemn both parties equally, when it is clear you cannot morally compare occupied and massacred Palestine with the occupying state, Israel, which also possesses military superiority and acts on the margins of international law,” said Maduro.

The Venezuelan president has called for an emergency meeting of the United Nations Human Rights Council to condemn the Israeli regime for its atrocities and policy of genocide against the Palestinian population in Gaza.

Meanwhile, Bolivian President Evo Morales has also condemned the Israeli invasion of Gaza, saying it was time to take action “to end the genocide that Israel is carrying out on Palestine.”

Israeli warplanes have been carrying out incessant airstrikes against Gaza since July 8. On July 17, thousands of Israeli soldiers launched a ground invasion into the densely-populated strip as well.

A total of 478 Palestinians have so far been killed in Israel’s war on Gaza and more than 3,000 others have been wounded.

FM

Gaza: this shameful injustice will only end if the cost of it rises

The idea that Israel is defending itself from unprovoked attacks is absurd. Occupied people have the right to resist

 

The Guardian, Wednesday 16 July 2014 20.15 BST

 

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A relative of the four Palestinian children killed by a shell fired by an Israeli naval gunboat.
A relative of the four Palestinian children killed by a shell fired by an Israeli naval gunboat. Photograph: APAimages/REX
 

For the third time in five years, the world’s fourth largest military power has launched a full-scale armed onslaught on one of its most deprived and overcrowded territories. Since Israel’s bombardment of the Gaza Strip began, just over a week ago, more than 200 Palestinians have been killed. Nearly 80% of the dead are civilians, over 20% of them children.

Around 1,400 have been wounded and 1,255 Palestinian homes destroyed. So far, Palestinian fire has killed one Israeli on the other side of the barrier that makes blockaded Gaza the world’s largest open-air prison.

But instead of demanding a halt to Israel’s campaign of collective punishment against what is still illegally occupied territory, the western powers have blamed the victims for fighting back. If it weren’t for Hamas’s rockets fired out of Gaza’s giant holding pen, they insist, all of this bloodletting would end.

“No country on earth would tolerate missiles raining down on its citizens from outside its borders,” Barack Obama declared, echoed by a mostly pliant media. Perhaps it’s scarcely surprising that states which have themselves invaded and occupied a string of Arab and Muslim countries in the past decade should take the side of another occupier they fund and arm to the hilt.

But the idea that Israel is responding to a hail of rockets out of a clear blue sky takes “narrative framing” beyond the realm of fantasy. In fact, after the deal that ended Israel’s last assault on Gaza in 2012, rocketing from Gaza fell to its lowest level for 12 years.

The latest violence is supposed to have been triggered by the kidnapping and killing of three Israeli teenagers in the occupied West Bank in June, for which Hamas denied responsibility. But its origin clearly lies in the collapse of US-sponsored negotiations for a final settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in the spring.

That was followed by the formation of a “national reconciliation” government by the Fatah and Hamas movements, whose division has been a mainstay of Israeli and US policy. Israeli incursions and killings were then stepped up, including attacks on Palestinian civilians by armed West Bank settlers. In May, two Palestinian teenagers were shot dead by the Israeli army with barely a flicker of interest outside the country.

It’s now clear the Israeli government knew from the start that its own kidnapped teenagers had been killed within hours. But the news was suppressed while a #BringBackOurBoys campaign was drummed up and a sweeping crackdown launched against Hamas throughout the West Bank.

Over 500 activists were arrested and more than half a dozen killed – along with a Palestinian teenager burned to death by settlers. Binyamin Netanyahu’s aim was evidently to signal that whatever deal Hamas had signed with Mahmoud Abbas would never be accepted by Israel.

Gaza had nothing to do with the kidnapping, but Israeli attacks were also launched on the strip and Hamas activists killed. It was those killings and the West Bank campaign that led to Hamas resuming its rocket attacks – and in turn to Israel’s devastating bombardment.

Hamas is now blamed for refusing to accept a ceasefire plan cooked up by Netanyahu and his ally, the Egyptian President Sisi, who overthrew Hamas’s sister organisation the Muslim Brotherhood last year and has since tightened the eight-year siege of Gaza.

But having already suffered so much, many Gazans believe no further truce should be agreed without the lifting of the illegal blockade which has reduced the strip to hunger and beggary and effectively imprisoned its population.

As the independent Palestinian MP Mustafa Barghouti puts it, the Egyptian proposal was a “game” Israel will now use to escalate the war. Some sense of what can now be expected was given by the Israeli reserve major general Oren Shachor, who explained: “If we kill their families, that will frighten them.”

Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu.
Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu. Photograph: Dan Balilty/EPA

The idea that Israel is defending itself against unprovoked attacks from outside its borders is an absurdity. Despite Israel’s withdrawal of settlements and bases in 2005, Gaza remains occupied both in reality and international law, its border, coastal waters, resources, airspace and power supply controlled by Israel.

So the Palestinians of Gaza are an occupied people, like those in the West Bank, who have the right to resist, by force if they choose – though not deliberately to target civilians. But Israel does not have a right of self-defence over territories it illegally occupies – it has an obligation to withdraw. That occupation, underpinned by the US and its allies, is now entering its 48th year. Most of the 1.8 million Palestinians enduring continuous bombardment in Gaza are themselves refugees or their descendants, who were driven out or fled from cities such as Jaffa 66 years ago when Israel was established.

It can’t seriously be argued that Israel’s refusal to withdraw from the rump of the territory on which the United Nations voted to establish a Palestinian state in 1947 is because of rocket fire. It was after all during the period of quiescence over the past year that the Israeli government rejected the US plan for even a figleaf of a two-state solution – and stepped up illegal colonisation. As Netanyahu made clear this week, there cannot be “any agreement in which we relinquish security control” of the West Bank.

So we’re left with a one-state solution, operated on ethnically segregated apartheid-style lines, in which a large section of the population has no say in who rules over them, indefinitely. But it’s folly to imagine that this shameful injustice will continue without an escalating cost for those who enforce it.

Palestinian resistance is often criticised as futile given the grotesque power imbalance between the two sides. But Hamas, which attracts support more for its defiance than its Islamism, has been strengthened by the events of the past week, as it has shown it can hit back across Israel – while Abbas, dependent on an imploded “peace process”, has been weakened still further.

The conflict’s eruptions are certainly coming thicker and faster. Despite heroic Israeli efforts to fix the narrative, global opinion has never been more sympathetic to the Palestinian cause. But the brutal reality is that there will be no end to Israel’s occupation until Palestinians and their supporters are able to raise its price to the occupier, in one way or another – and change the balance of power on the ground.

 

http://www.theguardian.com/com...acks-occupied-people

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by asj:

Quote (Ban Ki Moon)

 

"While I was en route to Doha, dozens more civilians, including children, have been killed in Israeli military strikes in the Shijaiyah neighborhood in Gaza," he said.

 

"I condemn this atrocious action. Israel must exercise maximum restraint and do far more to protect civilians," he said unquote

Ban Ki Moon can utter all the statements he wants, but in the end he will do nothing effectively for the Palestine people, and as usual be firmly positioned in support Israel.

FM
Originally Posted by Demerara_Guy:

Though the hands and wheels of justice have an extremely long way to achieve tangible results in the Middle East, they will gradually be accomplish.

 

DG 

 

I agree.. I am deeply saddened as the world watches as the helpless people of Palestine are murdered. The pictures of women holding their children and the injuries are unbearable.

 

I pray that one day that the People of Palestine are liberated.

 

How can President Obama sit idle while women and children are killed ?

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by asj:

ISRAELIS ATROCITIES IN GAZA

 

 

This innocent child does not deserve to be treated like this. We must speak out against this injustice.

 

How different is this child form a child in Israel ? Is his life worth less than those who live in Israel?

 

My sweet Lord, please save the children of Palestine.

FM
Hamas rejects Gaza truce unless blockade lifted
 

Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal holds a press conference in the Qatari capital Doha on July 23, 2014.

 
Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal holds a press conference in the Qatari capital Doha on July 23, 2014.
 
Thu Jul 24, 2014 1:5AM GMT
 

The Palestinian resistance movement Hamas has rejected a ceasefire with Israel unless its demands, including the lifting of the Gaza siege, are met.

"Let's agree first on the demands and on implementing them and then we can agree on the zero hour for a ceasefire... We will not accept any proposal that does not lift the blockade...We do not desire war and we do not want it to continue but we will not be broken by it," Hamas Political Bureau chief Khaled Meshaal said at a press conference in the Qatari capital Doha on Wednesday.

Meshaal also accused the United States of complicity in the crimes of Israelis against the Palestinians, saying Washington is adopting double standards with regards to the plight of the Palestinians.

He also praised the resistance of Gazan civilians and resistance fighters in the face of the Israeli aggression.

The Hamas leader further blasted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for taking the revenge of Tel Aviv's military failure in Gaza on civilians.

Since July 8, Israeli warplanes have been hitting numerous sites in the Gaza Strip, demolishing houses and burying families in the rubble. Israeli tanks also began a ground offensive against the impoverished Palestinian land on July 17.

The Israeli raids have killed more than 700 Palestinians, including women and children, and injured over 4,200 others so far.

The United Nations Security Council has expressed serious concern over the growing number of casualties in the Palestinian coastal enclave.

FM
718 people killed in Israeli war on Gaza

Thu Jul 24, 2014 6:49AM GMT

 

The death toll from the Israeli war on the besieged Gaza Strip has reached 718, as the Israeli offensive continues on to a 17th day.

 

Israeli forces targeted an area near the city of Khan Yunis in southern Gaza, as well as a district in the northern Gaza’s Jabalia.

Reports say that at least 21 people were killed on Thursday - mostly in Khan Yunis - including a family of six.

At least 4,250 Palestinians have also been wounded since Israel started its air raids on July 8 and its ground invasion nearly 10 days later.

According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), about 150 Palestinian children have been killed. Another 107,000 children are also in need of direct and specialized psychosocial support.

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has also said that one Palestinian child has been killed every one hour over the past two days in Gaza.

Tel Aviv has so far targeted more than 3,250 locations in the besieged strip, completely destroying nearly 500 homes and partially damaging 2,644.

The Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas, has been launching retaliatory attacks against Israel.

Israel has so far confirmed the death of at least 32 Israeli soldiers.

Meanwhile, more than 120,000 Palestinians have become displaced and have no place to go.

UN officials say that 70 percent of Gazans do not have access to safe water, as major water wells have been hit directly by the Israeli forces.

FM

23/07/2014 - 10:53:46Back to World Home

 

John Kerry flew into Israel’s main airport today despite a US ban in a sign of his determination to achieve a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip – despite little evidence of progress in negotiations.

 

The US secretary of state is due to meet Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas and United Nations secretary-general Ban Ki-moon during what appears to be a crucial day in the faltering talks.

US officials have downplayed expectations for an immediate, lasting truce between Israel and the Hamas militant group that controls Gaza, but Mr Kerry hopes to at least define the limits of what each side would accept in a potential ceasefire.

He flew into Tel Aviv in a US Air Force jet a day after the Federal Aviation Administration banned commercial flights into Ben-Gurion Airport. The FAA imposed the 24-hour restriction after a Hamas rocket landed within a mile of the airport yesterday.

The FAA will reassess its ban later today. The European Aviation Safety Agency also issued an advisory saying it “strongly recommends” airlines avoid the airport. Israeli officials said the precautionary step was unnecessary and “gave terror a prize” by reacting to Hamas’s threats. It also prompted a complaint to Mr Kerry by Mr Netanyahu.

The State Department said the meetings would continue Mr Kerry’s efforts to get Hamas and Israel to declare a truce after more than two weeks of fighting in the Gaza Strip.

More than 630 Palestinians and about 30 Israelis have been killed in the violence. Israel says its troops have killed hundreds of Hamas gunmen, while Gaza officials say the vast majority have been civilians, many of them children.

Mr Kerry flew to Tel Aviv from Cairo, where he met Egypt’s president and other high-level officials. Egypt, Israel and the US back an unconditional ceasefire, to be followed by talks on a possible new border arrangement for Gaza. Israel and Egypt have severely restricted movement in and out of Gaza since Hamas seized the territory in 2007.

Hamas has rejected repeated Egyptian truce proposals. The militant group, with backing from its allies Qatar and Turkey, says it wants guarantees on lifting the blockade before halting its fire. Mr Kerry spoke several times yesterday with Turkish foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu and Qatari foreign minister Khalid al-Attiya.

Egypt has also been negotiating with some Hamas officials, but relations between the two sides have been strained since Egypt outlawed the Muslim Brotherhood, which has ties to Hamas, after last year’s overthrow of former president Mohammed Morsi.

Israel launched a massive air campaign on July 8 to stop relentless Hamas rocket fire into Israel, and expanded it last week to a ground war aimed at destroying tunnels the military says Hamas has constructed from Gaza into Israel for attacks against Israelis. Israel has struck almost 3,000 sites in Gaza, killed more than 180 armed Palestinians and uncovered 66 access shafts to 23 tunnels, its military said.

Egyptian foreign minister Sameh Shukri said yesterday’s talks aimed “to not only resolve this issue, but also to set in motion once again the peace process that secretary Kerry has been so actively involved in so as to end this ongoing conflict between the Palestinians and the Israelis”.

Mr Kerry stopped short of advocating a new round of peace talks but he left the door open for broad negotiations between Israel and Palestinian officials once a ceasefire is in place.

“Just reaching a ceasefire is clearly not enough,” he told reporters after meeting Egyptian president Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi. “It is imperative that there be a serious engagement, discussion, negotiation, regarding the underlying issues and addressing all the concerns that have brought us to where we are today.”

Mr Ban yesterday met Palestinian authorities in Ramallah and Mr Netanyahu in Israel, where he urged a resumption of talks towards a two-state solution.

Mr Netanyahu responded that Hamas, a group whose charter calls for the destruction of Israel, does not want a two-state solution and said the international community needed to hold Hamas accountable for the latest round of violence, saying its refusal to agree to a ceasefire had prevented an earlier end to the fighting.

FM

A Palestinian girl looks at houses which witnesses said were damaged in an Israeli air strike that killed two children, in the northern Gaza Strip, 24 July 2014 The UN says people are running out of food and water in Gaza
 

UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos has expressed extreme concern at the situation in Gaza, describing a ceasefire as "vital".

She said the conflict meant 44% of Gaza was a no-go area for Palestinians, and residents were running out of food.

More than 710 Palestinians and 30 Israelis have been killed in the past 16 days of fighting, officials say.

Israel's ground operations and air strikes have continued, and more Hamas rockets have been fired into Israel.

Israel launched its military offensive on 8 July with the declared objective of stopping rocket fire from Gaza.

'Terrible'

Speaking on Thursday, Valerie Amos said: "We have over 118,000 people now who are sheltering in UN schools... people are running out of food. Water is also a serious concern."

 

Baroness Amos: "People are running out of food, water is also a serious concern"

The situation in Gaza was "terrible" and "dire", she added.

The UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) says a 1.9 mile (3km) wide strip, encompassing 44% of Gaza, has been designated as a no-go zone by the Israeli military.

Map of Gaza

While no-one denied Israel the right to defend itself, there was serious concern for the repercussions for civilians on the ground, said Baroness Amos.

Meanwhile, the US Federal Aviation Authority lifted a ban on US airlines flying into Tel Aviv, which came into force on Tuesday after a rocket landed about a mile (1.6km) away from Ben Gurion airport

However, several European airlines have continued to avoid landing in Tel Aviv.

Benjamin Netanyahu said UN criticism of Israeli action was a "travesty of justice, fairness and common sense"

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday he regretted each Palestinian civilian death, but said they were "the responsibility of Hamas".

He was standing beside UK Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, who said the cycle of violence had been triggered by Hamas "firing hundreds of rockets at Israeli towns and cities indiscriminately". Mr Hammond also emphasised that the UK was "gravely concerned by the ongoing heavy level of civilian casualties."

The Israeli leader was deeply critical of a vote by the UN Human Rights Council for an official investigation into alleged war crimes in Gaza, describing the decision as "grotesque" and "a travesty of justice".

'Lift the blockade'

Meanwhile, Khaled Meshaal, leader of Islamist militant group Hamas, said there could be no ceasefire to ease the conflict in Gaza without an end to Israel's blockade.

Paul Adams saw a Red Cross mission attacked by civilians in Gaza

"We will not accept any initiative that does not lift the blockade on our people and that does not respect their sacrifices," he said.

Israel imposed restrictions on the Gaza Strip in 2006 after Hamas abducted Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. The measures were tightened by Israel and Egypt in 2007 after Hamas ousted rival Fatah and forcibly took control in Gaza after winning elections the year before.

Hamas and Fatah announced a reconciliation deal in April, but the move was condemned by Israel which regards Hamas as a terrorist group.

Israel's Science Minister Yaakov Peri told Israeli web portal Walla that he did not see a ceasefire in the coming days, as the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) needed more time to dismantle Hamas' underground tunnel network.

There have been hundreds of rocket attacks on Israel, and Israeli air strikes on Gaza, since the Israeli offensive began.

Palestinian medical sources say the death toll rose to more than 710 on Thursday.

Israel says 32 soldiers and two Israeli civilians have been killed since 8 July.

A Thai worker was also killed when a rocket fired from Gaza landed near the southern Israeli city of Ashkelon on Wednesday.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon expressed "outrage and regret" at rockets which were placed inside a UN-run school in Gaza.

"Those responsible are turning schools into potential military targets, and endangering the lives of innocent children," Mr Ban's spokesperson said in a statement on Wednesday.

FM
Last edited by Former Member

Gaza fighting rages amid cease-fire efforts

FM
West colludes with genocidal Tel Aviv: Analyst

 
Israel has targeted more than 3,250 locations in the besieged Gaza Strip in its latest attacks on the Palestinian territory since July 8, 2014.
 
 
Thu Jul 24, 2014 12:17PM
 

The so-called peace process between Israel and Palestine looks like a ‘sick joke’ as the Zionist regime moves ahead with its atrocious killing of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, an analyst writes for Press TV.

“The 20-year so-called peace process is just another sick joke whereby the Western-backed genocidal regime in Tel Aviv gets away with more mass murder and other crimes against humanity,” Finian Cunningham wrote in an article for the Press TV website.

He said that any so-called peace will give nothing but “heaps more of misery and suffering” to the beleaguered Palestinians.

“The truth is that Israeli military aggression against the people of Palestine has been an ongoing, non-stop campaign since 1948,” wrote the analyst.

Referring to the ongoing Israeli war on Gaza, Cunningham said the Zionist entity is putting once again “on display” its crimes against humanity “in the most despicable and barbaric way.”

He said a truce between the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas and the Israeli regime could not fix the oppression of Palestinians, adding, “There is a hemorrhage of human life that requires deep intervention.”

Nearly 750 Palestinians have been killed in 17 days of Israeli aerial and ground offensives in the besieged Gaza Strip.

According to Palestinian human rights group estimates, 81 percent of those killed in Gaza since Israel first launched its ongoing offensive on July 8 are civilians.

Tel Aviv has so far targeted more than 3,250 locations in the besieged strip, completely destroying nearly 500 homes and partially damaging over 2,600.

UN officials say that 70 percent of Gazans do not have access to safe water, as major water wells have been hit directly Israel.

FM

15 dead as Israeli fire hits U.N. facility in Gaza

 

GAZA CITY — Clashes continued between the Israeli military and Hamas fighters Thursday, as a United Nations facility was hit by Israeli tank shells, killing at least 15 seeking shelter.

Hundreds of people were seeking shelter in a U.N. school in a northern Gaza compound when it was hit, Gaza health official Ashraf al-Kidra said. At least 150 were injured.

The strike is the fourth time a U.N. facility has been hit during fighting between Israel and Hamas. UNRWA, the Palestinian refugee agency, has said it has found militant rockets inside two vacant schools.

The Israeli military said it was reviewing the incident, charging that Hamas-launched rockets had landed in the area and that those rockets may be responsible for the deaths.

UNRWA spokesman Chris Gunness called on all sides "to respect the sanctity of civilian life, but also the inviolability of U.N. property."

Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said Israel was targeting displaced people and "committing massacres." Israel maintains it does all it can to prevent civilians casualties.

The deaths raised the number of Palestinians killed in the conflict to more than 750, most of them civilians, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) says it has lost 32 soldiers since July 17, when it widened its air campaign into a full-scale ground operation aimed at halting rocket fire from Gaza and destroying a sophisticated network of cross-border tunnels. Two Israeli civilians and a Thai worker in Israel have also been killed.

The developments came as the Israeli parliament swore in Reuven Rivlin on Thursday as the country's new president, replacing Nobel Peace laureate Shimon Peres.

Earlier in the day, the Israeli military said it struck 35 targets in Gaza overnight, and took custody of 150 men for questioning, releasing about half of those men several hours later. The Iron Dome anti-rocket system intercepted at least eight rockets fired from Gaza into central Israel on Thursday morning, the Israeli military said.

 

An Israeli airstrike hit the Jebaliya refugee camp Thursday, killing six members of the same family and an 18-month-old boy, according to Gaza officials. At least 20 others were injured in the strike. Another airstrike in Abassan, in southern Gaza, killed five members of another family, al-Kidra said.

Heavy fighting was reported along the border of central Gaza on Thursday, Gaza police spokesman Ayman Batniji said. Israeli troops fired tank shells that reached parts of the Bureij and Maghazi refugee camps. There were no immediate reports of injuries.

Clashes also erupted between Palestinian fighters and Israeli troops in the northern town of Beit Lahiya, and the sound of explosions was audible across the town, Batniji said.

Israeli naval vessels fired more than 100 shells along the coast of Gaza City and northern Gaza, Batniji said. Rescue teams were prevented from operating in the area because of the heavy fire, he added.

More than 2,000 rockets have been fired at Israel from Gaza since July 8, and the Israeli military says it has uncovered more than 30 tunnels leading from Gaza to Israel, which Israel says Hamas uses to carry out attacks.

Despite the continued fighting, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration lifted a ban on commercial flights just before midnight Wednesday, but European airlines extended their cancellations through Thursday.

FM

CIOG horrified by images of death, destruction in Gaza

 

July 23, 2014 By GuyanaTimes

 

Dear Editor,

 

The Central Islamic Organisation of Guyana (CIOG) is horrified by the images of death and destruction emanating from Gaza as a result of the Israeli attacks on the Palestinian people. These senseless acts of barbarism, the murdering of innocent men, women and children, permanently maiming and disfiguring those lucky to survive death, did not in the past, or will not in the future, resolve the conflicts that currently exist between the Palestinian and Israeli people.

The actions of Israel only serve to inflame the ill feeling that currently exist, and forces retaliation from the Palestinians, despite their limited and meagre resources.

The CIOG appeals to all nations who share the common values of justice, freedom and equal rights to demand a cessation of the current atrocities perpetrated on the people of Gaza. We demand a united voice in calling for Israel to realise that they are defying the international laws that they themselves subscribe to, but do not recognise it for their neighbours.

In this Holy Month of Ramadan, Muslims worldwide are aggrieved and pained at the loss of life of our fellow brothers and sisters. We therefore urge those concerned, and those with influence over the parties to commence dialogue that can assist in bringing an end to hostilities and promote peace, justice and freedom for the oppressed and subjugated people of Palestine.

FM

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