GAZA/JERUSALEM (Reuters) - More than 60 Palestinians and 13 Israeli
soldiers were killed as Israel shelled a Gaza neighborhood and battled
militants on Sunday in the bloodiest fighting in a near two-week-old offensive.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas accused Israel of carrying out a
massacre in Shejaia in the eastern suburbs of the city of Gaza and
declared three days of mourning.
Israel's army said it was
targeting militants from Gaza's dominant Hamas group whom it alleged had
fired rockets from Shejaia and built tunnels and command centers there.
The army said it had warned locals two days earlier to leave.
It was the Israeli military's highest one-day death toll since a 2006 war against Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon.
Army sources said seven of the 13 soldiers were in an armored personnel
carrier hit by anti-tank fire. Others were killed setting up positions
inside houses they had taken over, the sources added.
Residents
fled Sunday's fighting along streets strewn with bodies and rubble,
many of them taking shelter in Gaza's Shifa hospital.
Cries of
"Did you see Ahmed?" "Did you see my wife?" echoed through the
courtyard. Inside, dead and wounded lay on blood-stained floors.
Shifa hospital's director, Naser Tattar, said 17 children, 14 women and
four elderly were among the 62 dead, and about 400 people were wounded
in the Israeli assault.
Gaza's Health Ministry said 37 other
Palestinians were also killed on Sunday, bringing the Gaza death toll
since an Israeli air and naval bombardments began on July 8 to 433, many
of them civilians. Some 2,600 Palestinians have been wounded, it said.
In all, 18 Israeli soldiers and two Israeli civilians have been killed
since the launch of the offensive, which expanded on Thursday into a
ground push, following mounting cross-border rocket attacks by
militants.
Palestinian fighters kept up their rocket fire on
Israel on Sunday. Sirens sounded in southern Israeli towns and in the
Tel Aviv metropolitan area. There were no reports of casualties from
those salvoes.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said
he had spoken again with U.S. President Barack Obama about the Gaza
situation on Sunday.
At a news conference in Tel Aviv, after
the military released news of the soldiers' deaths, Netanyahu pledged to
press on with the campaign.
"We are undeterred. We shall continue the operation as long as is required," he said.
DEATH TOLL TOPS 400
Thousands streamed out of Shejaia, some by foot and others piling into
the backs of trucks and sitting on the hoods of cars filled with
families trying to get away. Several people rode out of the neighborhood
in the shovel of a bulldozer.
Video given to Reuters by a
local showed at least a dozen corpses, including three children, lying
in streets, though the footage could not be verified independently.
As the tank shells began to land, Shejaia residents called radio
stations pleading for evacuation. An air strike on the Shejaia home of
Khalil al-Hayya, a senior Hamas official, killed his son,
daughter-in-law and two grandchildren, hospital officials said.
Hamas's armed wing, the Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades, said it used
landmines and roadside bombs against advancing Israeli tanks and armored
personnel carriers.
"As we moved into Shejaia we were met by
anti-tank missiles, RPGs, heavy, extensive weapons fire at the forces
from the houses, from the surrounding buildings," said
Lieutenant-Colonel Peter Lerner, an Israeli military spokesman.
Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon said some of the Israeli
firepower was unleashed to try to extricate soldiers who had come under
attack.
The Israeli military said it beefed up its presence on
Sunday, with a focus on destroying missile stockpiles and the vast
tunnel system Hamas built along the frontier with Israel.
"I
estimate that within two or three days the major part of the tunnels
will have been destroyed," Yaalon said at the news conference where
Netanyahu also spoke.
Netanyahu, who has accused Hamas of using
non-combatants as human shields, told CNN the army was concentrating on
military targets.
"All civilian casualties are unintended by
us, but actually 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."
TRUCE EFFORTS
The U.N. Relief and Works Agency said that 81,000 displaced people had now taken refuge in 61 UNRWA shelters in Gaza.
Egypt, Qatar, France and the United Nations, among others, have all
been pushing, with little sign of progress, for a permanent ceasefire in
the worst surge of Israeli-Palestinian fighting in two years.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said he might travel to the Middle
East soon to try to aid truce efforts. He said he supported Israel's
efforts to destroy tunnels it says Gaza militants use for infiltration
attempts and to hide weaponry.
"We support Israel's right to defend itself against rockets that are continuing to come in," Kerry told Fox News.
Washington has also urged Israel to minimize civilian casualties.
Qatar was due to host a meeting between Abbas and U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Sunday, a senior Qatari source told
Reuters. Ban was due to travel to Kuwait, Egypt, Israel, the Palestinian
Territories and Jordan during the week, a U.N. statement said. The
Qatari source said Abbas would also meet Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal.
Western-backed Abbas in April struck a reconciliation deal with Hamas,
which seized the Gaza Strip in 2007 from forces loyal to his Fatah
movement. The agreement led to the formation of a Palestinian unity
government and Israel's pullout from U.S.-brokered peace talks.
Hamas has already rejected one Egyptian-brokered truce, saying any deal
must include an end to a blockade of the coastal area and a
recommitment to a ceasefire reached after an eight-day war in Gaza in
2012.
Hostilities escalated following the killing last month of
three Jewish students that Israel blames on Hamas. Hamas neither
confirmed nor denied involvement.
The apparent revenge murder
of a Palestinian youth in Jerusalem, for which Israel has charged three
Israelis, further fueled tension.
More than 70 killed in Israeli shelling, clashes in Gaza
Reuters
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.