Airlines
suspend Israel flights
23
July, 2014
Major
US airlines and a number of their European counterparts have
suspended flights to Israel over safety concerns after a rocket
landed less than 2km from Ben Gurion Airport.
The
US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) ordered three US carriers
that fly to Israel - Delta, United and US Airways - to halt flights
for 24 hours.
Europe's
aviation regulator is also urging airlines not to fly to Tel Aviv.
Lufthansa,
KLM, and Air France had cancelled flights to the city even before the
regulator's warning.
The
move comes amid heightened scrutiny over flights near conflict zones.
Israel's
Transportation Ministry asked the airlines to reverse their decision,
saying the airport was "safe for landings and departures".
"Ben
Gurion Airport is safe and completely guarded and there is no reason
whatsoever that American companies would stop their flights and hand
terror a prize," it said in a statement
Israeli Attacks on Gaza
Continue: 630 Palestinians,
31 Israelis Dead
Israel Shells Greek Orthodox Church Full of Refugees
http://news.antiwar.com/2014/07/22/israeli-attacks-on-gaza-continue-630-palestinians-29-israelis-dead/
Israeli
forces continue to pound the Gaza Strip today and the death toll
continues to rise precipitously, with at
least 630 Palestinians now
confirmed killed, overwhelmingly civilians.
Israel
had two
more soldiers slain as well,
bringing the Israeli toll to 31 people dead, 29
of whom were military personnel.
Another Israeli soldier was reported missing, fueling speculation
about claims of Hamas capturing one.
The
UN Security Council iscontinuing to
push for a ceasefire, though there is no indication that any new
progress has been made on that front, while Israeli officials
continue to talk up further escalation.
Palestinian
civilians continue to try to flee around the strip finding some safe
place to hide, though there don’t appear to be any. One
Greek Orthodox church agreed to
shelter some 1,000 civilians, but was already in the cross-hairs
of Israeli shelling.
Others have sought refuge at UN schools, hospitals or other sites
known by Israel to be totally civilian in nature, though this does
not seem to make them significantly less likely to come under attack.
"A Place of Indescribable
Loss": As Ceasefire Talks
Begin, Israel Bombs
Hospital, Mosques and
Homes
The
Israeli assault on Gaza has entered its third week as the Palestinian
death toll has topped 600, mostly civilians. More than 100 of the
dead are children. More than 3,700 Palestinians have been injured.
Israel says it has lost 27 soldiers since the ground invasion began.
Earlier today, Israel confirmed the remains of one of its soldiers
presumed to have been killed in Gaza had still not been found or
identified. This comes two days after Hamas said it had captured the
soldier. So far today, Israel has struck more than 70 sites inside
Gaza, including five mosques and a football stadium. On Monday, at
least 103 Palestinians died, including 11 when Israel bombed a
residential tower block in Gaza City. Five children died in that
attack. In the central Gaza town of Deir al-Balah, five people died
and 70 were wounded when Israel shelled the al-Aqsa Hospital. It
became the third medical facility to be struck by Israel in the past
two weeks. The injured included about 30 medics. We are joined from
Gaza City by Democracy Now! correspondent and independent journalist
Sharif Abdel Kouddous. "Gaza is a place of indescribable loss,
and a place where family sizes continue to be shrunk by falling
bombs," he says.
Kouddous
is reporting live from the Associated Press studio, which shares a
floor with the Al Jazeera studio in Gaza City. He says that Israel
fired shots into the windows of Al Jazeera’s office earlier this
morning. He reports that both news agencies evacuated staff from the
building. AP has since confirmed that Israel does not plan to target
their office; however, Al Jazeera has not been able to confirm the
same, and its staff are waiting downstairs at the bottom of the
building. As of now, AP staff are back at work in the office on a
voluntary basis.
"This is another instance of targeting the media," Kouddous says.
"This is another instance of targeting the media," Kouddous says.
Journalist
attacked by ‘angry Israeli’ during live report on Gaza
A
BBC Arabic correspondent was attacked on air in the Israeli city of
Ashkelon, just outside Gaza, while reporting on the ongoing
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
The journalist, Feras Khatib, was wearing a PRESS vest during the live report in the Arabic language when a man, apparently an Israeli, approached and violently shoved him sideways, as seen on the video posted on YouTube.
The
attacker was quickly pulled away from camera view by another member
of the BBC team, while Khatib continued his reporting.
The
incident took place in Ashkelon, just north of Gaza, according to a
BBC Arabic spokesman. The attacker reportedly left right after the
incident.
Khatib
"was
manhandled by an angry Israeli...Feras was unharmed and will continue
reporting as normal,”
the channel said in a statement.
Meanwhile,
Al Jazeera's office in Gaza was fired at on Tuesday. The network
blames Israel for the attack. "Two very precise shots were fired
straight into our building," Al Jazeera’s Stefanie Dekker
said. "We are high up in the building so we had a very strong
vantage point over the area. But we have evacuated."
Tuesday
saw the Gaza
conflict move
into its third week. According to the Gaza Health Ministry, the
number of Palestinians killed has risen to 633 – the vast majority
of whom are civilians.
Overall,
five mosques, a sports stadium, and the home of a deceased Hamas
military chief were hit on Tuesday.
Meanwhile,
29 Israelis have been killed – two of them civilians. Two soldiers
were also killed on Tuesday, according to Tel Aviv. This death toll
is the highest number of Israeli military deaths since the 2006
Lebanon war.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.