Israeli
air strikes target Hamas leaders as ceasefire fails
Netanyahu's
security cabinet discusses limited ground operation in Gaza as more
Palestinians killed in overnight attacks
15
July, 201
Israeli
missiles struck the houses of several senior Hamas figures overnight,
as at least seven Palestinians were reportedly killed in the latest
escalation of violence.The renewed strikes came a day after the
failure of a brief and one-sided ceasefire on Tuesday observed by
Israel, but not by Hamas.
Among
the residences targeted were those of former interior minister Fathi
Hamad and senior Hamas leader Mahmoud al-Zahar, which was destroyed.
Zahar was said to be hiding elsewhere at the time of the missile
strike.
The
Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, has said he had "no
choice" but to escalate Israel's bombing campaign. "When
there is no ceasefire, our answer is fire," he said.
The
Israeli security cabinet met into the early hours of Wednesday
discussing a limited ground operation, an Israeli official has
revealed.
Early
on Wednesday morning, Israel dropped leaflets and delivered warnings
by phone and text that tens of thousands of residents of two Gaza
City neighbourhoods, Zeitoun in the south and Shujai'iya in the east,
should evacuate their homes ahead of planned strikes on Wednesday and
head to the city centre.
Among
those ordered to leave were the patients of a rehabilitation
hospital.
But
the hospital's director, Basman Ashi, said everyone would remain and
that foreign volunteers had arrived to serve as human shields.
Israel's
ministry of the interior has told residents to ignore the warning,
calling it "psychological warfare".
Just
before the leaflets were dropped shortly after 8am, Palestinian
factions fired a salvo of rockets from Gaza. The leaflet said the aim
of the evacuation was to "to save your lives". It was the
first time in the nine-day conflict that Gaza City residents have
been ordered to flee although northern districts received a similar
warning on Sunday
The
heavy bombardment of Gaza, which has so far claimed scores of
civilian lives, resumed on Tuesday afternoon after Israel warned that
Hamas "would pay the price" for rejecting an Egypt-brokered
truce plan and instead hitting Israel with scores of rockets.
Hamas's
armed wing, the Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades, rejected the
ceasefire deal – a proposal that addressed in only general terms
some of its key demands – and said its battle with Israel would
continue.
But
Moussa Abu Marzouk, a Hamas political official who was in Cairo, said
the movement, which is seeking a deal that would ease the Egyptian
and Israeli border restrictions throttling Gaza's economy, has not
reached a final decision on Cairo's proposal.
Rocket
fire killed an Israeli man on Tuesday, the first Israeli fatality in
eight days of fighting. In Gaza, more than 202 people have been
killed and almost 1,500 wounded, Palestinian officials said, making
it the deadliest Israel-Hamas confrontation in just over five years.
Since
8 July, militants have fired nearly 1,000 rockets and mortars into
Israel, and Israel has carried out around 1,500 strikes against
targets inside the Gaza Strip, according to the army. The Egyptian
proposal, initially accepted by Israel, had been the first attempt to
end the fighting.
The
ceasefire unraveled in less than a day, a sign that it will be harder
than before to reach a truce amid claims that Hamas had not been
informed of the terms of the proposed deal in advance.
According
to Israeli media reports, it was not only the Islamist group that was
kept out of the loop of deliberations between Israel and Egypt. Also
excluded, according to a report in Haaretz, was Netanyahu's foreign
minister, Avigdor Lieberman, and minister for the economy, Nafatali
Bennett – both of whom oppose any ceasefire – who claim they
heard about the proposed ceasefire from media.
The
ceasefire terms – which Israel observed for six short hours while
Hamas continued firing rockets – fell far short of the militant
group's demands, including he lifting of the siege and opening of
border crossings and freedom for prisoners rearrested in the recent
crack down on Hamas on the West Bank.
Hamas
believes it has little to lose by continuing to fight, while a truce
on unfavourable terms could further weaken its grip on the Gaza
Strip, a territory it seized in 2007. Underscoring that position,
Gaza militants fired more than 120 rockets and mortar rounds at
Israel on Tuesday, during what Egypt had hoped would be a period of
de-escalation.
A
particularly heavy barrage came around dusk, with more than 40
rockets hitting Israel in just a few minutes, including one that fell
on an empty school.
TV
footage showed children cowering behind a wall in Tel Aviv's main
square as sirens went off. The current violence has been the
deadliest since a major Israeli military offensive in the winter of
2008-09.
War moves inside Israeli border. Minorities fear xenophobic on the streets
Israeli teen's deaths and a revenge attack on Palestinian youngster left both Arab and Jewish Israelis in a permanent state of fear. Overnight Hamas rocket attacks on Israeli residential areas deepen Arab-Jewish tensions. RT's Paula Slier reports on how Israelis are reacting to Palestinian aggression.
Gaza
human shields: Foreigners protect hospitals from IDF airstrikes
Israel
has resumed its military offensive against Gaza, just several hours
after unilaterally agreeing to a ceasefire. The deescalation plan
proposed by Egypt was initially supported by the Israeli government
but rejected by Hamas militants, who continued firing rockets.Harry
Fear visited a hospital in Gaza which continues working amid the
strikes
War moves inside Israeli border. Minorities fear xenophobic on the streets
Israeli teen's deaths and a revenge attack on Palestinian youngster left both Arab and Jewish Israelis in a permanent state of fear. Overnight Hamas rocket attacks on Israeli residential areas deepen Arab-Jewish tensions. RT's Paula Slier reports on how Israelis are reacting to Palestinian aggression.
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