Gaza family wiped out by Israeli bomb
The
four youngest members of the El Dallo family were the first to arrive
at the Shifa hospital morgue. Sara, 7, Jamal, 6, Yusef, 4, and
Ibrahim,2, children of rumoured Hamas member Mohamed El Dallo, were
laid two abreast on metal trays, swathed in white. .
18 November, 2012
Only
their small, distorted faces were left exposed to the local camera
crews, jostling to capture the latest victims of Israel's Operation
Pillar of Defence on film.
Nine
members of the family and two neighbours were inside the family home
when the Israeli missile struck, fired from an F16 jet shortly before
3pm. Every one of them was killed, all women and children. Mr Dallo,
who was not at home, survived.
As
Hamas police struggled to control furious friends and relatives
attempting to force their way into the morgue to see the bodies,
Palestinian emergency teams were still digging through the rubble of
the home on Nasser Street, in central Gaza City. Ten of the family
members had already been found but a 20 year-old woman was still
missing underneath the dirt and stone of her home.
The
devastating strike is the bloodiest single incident of this five-day
old war. It was launched as optimistic reports from anonymous Israeli
military officials circulated in the local media suggesting that the
crisis talks taking place in Cairo may soon produce a ceasefire.
Three
more Palestinians were killed in strikes late Sunday evening,
bringing the day’s toll to 29, the deadliest day so far of Israel’s
campaign against the Gaza Strip.
As
ambulances carrying more bodies of Dallo family raced into Shifa
hospital, Salama Maroof, a senior Hamas spokesman, told the Daily
Telegraph that there was little chance that hopes of a truce could be
realised when Israeli strikes were continuing with such catastrophic
human cost.
"Israel
has killed a family of eleven people this evening, and many, many
more. If Israel wants to stop its aggression, then we can talk. But
before then, how could we consider any deal?" Mr Maroof said.
Major
Guy Spigelman of the Israeli Defence Force confirmed that Israeli
jets had struck the home of a Hamas official in the afternoon, adding
that there would be an investigation launched into the multiple
deaths of civilians.
"We
never deliberately target civilians," Maj. Spigelman said. "We
will be investigating this incident but I would like to remind you
that we have carried out more than 1000 missions [in the last four
days]". He could give no more information about the Mr Dallo's
activities within Hamas, which is the elected government in Gaza but
has also military wing.
The
attack supported reports that Israel's target list had been expanded
in the past couple of days to include more homes of Hamas members.
Shehda
El Dallo, a relative of the family, rushed to the site having heard
the blast from his home nearby. He found the two story home leveled,
plumes of dust and smoke rising from the foundations. A truck parked
outside had been rendered a mangled wreck of metal.
Mr
Dallo's grandfather lived next door. The force of the explosion had
ripped the outside wall from his house, exposing the living room.
Perched on the wreckage of his furniture, Shedha described the pain
staking process of pulling bodies from the wreckage .
"The
four children were found together. Another woman, we don't know if it
was their mother yet, was in the front of the house. Their
grandmother was found somewhere here," he said, pointing vaguely
into the mess of concrete, plaster and metal struts.
A
small group of men from the neighbourhood stood in the middle of the
tree-lined residential street, peering past emergency vehicles to
watch the diggers at work. No one could say why the house had been
targeted. There was no police station nearby, no Hamas officials or
headquarters in the area.
They
said Mohammed El Dallo owned a grocery store in the centre of town.
"He wasn't politically affiliated," his relative insisted.
"They were just a normal family. This is just a normal street.
They said the kids had been watching TV when the bomb hit."
In
a separate attack, the Israeli military confirmed that it struck a
target in Gaza City at 2.30pm on Sunday, targeting Ihiar Bia, a
rocket manufacturing expert affiliated with Hamas.
More
than 60 Palestinians have now been killed Israel's aerial bombardment
of Gaza, most of them civilians, many of them women and children,
according to Ministry of Health.
The
morning saw the funerals of three year-old Tamir Salam and his two
year-old sister, killed as they slept in bed with their parents when
their house was hit in an F16 strike at 2am. They were the only
children of Salam Ibrahim and his wife.
"I
was sleeping, everything happened so suddenly. I heard the blast then
the bedroom wall collapsed on our bed," he said, raising a
cigarette to his mouth with a trembling hand. When the smoke cleared,
he saw that his children were dead.
He
said he had gone to bed feeling safe for the first time in days,
having been buoyed by news of progress in peace talks in Cairo.
The
Israeli military confirmed that no rockets were fired from Gaza into
Israel between 12am and 7am on Sunday morning. But while relative
calm took hold across Israeli skies, it was a night of heavy
bombardment across Gaza, with more than an hour of heavy artillery
fire from Israel naval boats at targets along the Gaza coast line.
On
Sunday morning the sirens were sounding above Tel Aviv and Ashqelon
again.
According
to Mr Maroof, Hamas is negotiating for more than just the cessation
Israeli airstrikes. Any resolution to this conflict would require
Israel to lift its five-year blockade of the Gaza.
"The
Egyptian president has said that we are nearing a deal but the
situation here on the ground is very different. Today 20 people were
killed, most of them women," Mr Maroof said. "Israel
started this war with its assassination of Ahmed Al Jaabari. If the
Israeli government agrees to stop this violence, then we can start to
talk."


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