Israel steps up Gaza offensive

Israel steps up Gaza offensive

Naval salvo kills 4 Palestinian boys on beach as death toll from bombardment hits 220; ground invasion fear grows
Agencies
Palestinians sleep in the yard of a UN school in the northern Gaza Strip town of Beit Lahiya early yesterday after evacuating their houses near the border with Israel. Photo: AFP
Palestinians sleep in the yard of a UN school in the northern Gaza Strip town of Beit Lahiya early yesterday after evacuating their houses near the border with Israel. Photo: AFP

Israel intensified its bombardment of Gaza yesterday, killing four children on a beach in an apparent naval salvo and launching deadly air strikes, as regional leaders sought to end the killing.
Israel urged the evacuation of several districts in the Gaza Strip where more than 100,000 people live, threatening ground operations to try to stem the rocket attacks.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed on Tuesday to step up the military campaign after Hamas dismissed an Egyptian ceasefire proposal, firing scores of rockets over the border despite the army holding its fire for six hours.
Yesterday, his security cabinet authorised the call-up of another 8,000 reservists, media reports said, joining 43,000 reserve troops who have already been mobilised.
Israeli experts predicted overland raids in the Gaza Strip to destroy command bunkers and tunnels that have allowed the outgunned Palestinians to withstand air and naval barrages and keep the rockets flying.

 

A Palestinian man walks past the house of senior Hamas official Mahmud al-Zahar after it was destroyed by an overnight Israeli air strike. Photo: AFP
A Palestinian man walks past the house of senior Hamas official Mahmud al-Zahar after it was destroyed by an overnight Israeli air strike. Photo: AFP

The punishing air campaign aimed at halting cross-border rocket fire by Hamas militants resumed after Egyptian-brokered truce efforts collapsed on Tuesday.
So far, Israel's campaign, now in its ninth day, has killed 220 Palestinians, with a Gaza-based human rights group saying over 80 percent of them were civilians.
In the same period, militants have fired more than 1,200 rockets at Israel, which on Tuesday claimed their first Israeli life.
Hamas said it had rejected the Egyptian truce efforts because it had not been included in the discussions.
The peace initiative continued yesterday, however, with a Hamas official meeting Egyptian leaders as Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas arrived in Cairo to join the diplomatic efforts.
In the latest violence, four children died and several were wounded in an apparent Israeli naval bombardment of a beach in Gaza City yesterday afternoon, medics said.
The first strike hit at around 1300 GMT, prompting terrified children and adults on the beach to scatter. A second and third struck as they ran, setting fire to huts on the beach.
The strikes appeared to be the result of shelling by the Israeli navy against an area with small shacks used by fishermen.
Several hours later an army spokeswoman said that the military was still checking into the reports. Several children ran inside a hotel where AFP journalists saw at least three with shrapnel injuries.
The dead boys, all from a family, were laid out, wrapped in the yellow flags of the Fatah party, in front of mourners.
Earlier, the Israeli military dropped flyers and sent text messages warning 100,000 people in northeastern Gaza to evacuate their homes ahead of an air campaign targeting "terror sites and operatives" in Zeitun and Shejaiya, two flashpoint districts east of Gaza City.
An identical message was sent to Beit Lahiya in the north, echoing a similar army warning on Sunday, when more than 17,000 residents of the north fled for their lives, most seeking refuge in UN-run schools.
The Israeli warnings appeared to have had no immediate effect, with only limited numbers seen leaving. Children picked up many of the flyers and played with them, an AFP correspondent said.
But for patients at Al-Wafa hospital in Shejaiya, many of whom are paralysed or in a coma, the warning simply provoked even more fear.
"We cannot leave our patients, they are helpless," director Basman Alashi told AFP, saying most of them were completely incapacitated and in no position to be moved.
"There is no place safe in Gaza. If a hospital is not safe, where is?" he said as the sound of nearby shelling rattled the windows.