Showing posts with label Gaza. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gaza. Show all posts

Saturday, 23 August 2014

Gaza rocket hits Israeli synagogue


Jerusalem - A rocket fired from Gaza hit a synagogue in the Israeli city of Ashdod on Friday, wounding three people, police said.

"There is damage at the scene and a number of people were injured by shrapnel," police spokesperson Micky Rosenfeld said. The attack came shortly before evening prayers ahead of the Jewish Sabbath. Ashdod is around 30km from Gaza.



Hamas and other militant groups fired more than two dozen rockets into Israel on Friday, injuring two other people, with no signs of a let up in the six-week war.

Israel carried out 25 air strikes on Gaza, killing four people, Gaza health officials said.

Reuters

[NEWS] 18 executed in Gaza


Gaza City - Palestinian militants in Gaza City executed 18 men on Friday for allegedly helping Israel in its six-week assault on the territory, Hamas TV reported.

Six them were grabbed from among hundreds of worshippers leaving the city's largest mosque, by men in the uniform of Hamas's military wing, the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, witnesses told AFP.

They were pushed to the ground. One of the masked men shouted: "This is the final moment of the Zionist enemy collaborators," then the gunmen sprayed them with bullets.



Earlier, another witness saw 11 people shot dead in a square near the remains of Gaza police headquarters, bombed by Israeli aircraft.

An 18th person was shot in front of bystanders in a separate incident nearby.

The Hamas-linked website Majd, said the 11 were killed after they "gave information to the Zionist enemy."

On Thursday, Majd said that three men had been put to death and seven arrested by Hamas's military wing for allegedly reconnoitring targets for Israeli strikes.

Israeli aircraft assassinated three leading Hamas commanders in a pre-dawn strike on Thursday and late Tuesday killed the wife and two children of Hamas military chief Mohammed Deif in a raid which levelled a six-storey building in Gaza City.

Another woman and child were killed in the same air strike.

Majd said on Friday that "the resistance" - a term used to cover militant groups including Hamas, the de facto ruling power in Gaza - was reinforcing "the struggle on the ground against the enemy which practises assassinations."

Punishable by death

The same website reported on August 6 that "a number" of alleged Palestinian collaborators had been killed, again without giving a date.

On 13 July, witnesses in the southern city of Rafah reported seeing gunmen kill a man in the street in another incident which appeared to be the execution of a suspected collaborator.

Israel and Hamas have been at war since 8 July in a conflict that has killed close to 2 090 Palestinians and 67 on the Israeli side.

Under Palestinian law, collaborating with Israel, murder and drug trafficking are punishable by death.

In principle, Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, who heads the Western-backed Palestinian Authority, is supposed to approve all executions.

Hamas, which swept parliamentary elections in 2006, has controlled the Gaza Strip since ousting Abbas loyalists from the territory the following year.

Although it handed the reins of power to a unity government in early June, it remains the de facto power in Gaza.

AFP

Tuesday, 29 July 2014

Israel intensifies Gaza attacks after Netanyahu warning

Gaza has seen one of its heaviest nights of bombardment in three weeks, after Israel's prime minister warned of a long conflict ahead.

Gaza's only power plant was damaged as Israel carried out 60 air strikes, also targeting sites associated with Hamas, the group which controls Gaza.

At least 60 Palestinians were killed, according to local health officials.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would continue to act until it had achieved its aims.

In a televised address, he stressed the need to destroy tunnels dug under the Gaza-Israel border, to prevent militants infiltrating Israel.



UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon expressed concern that Israel was reported to be dropping leaflets warning residents in northern Gaza to leave.

He said UN agencies there did not have the resources to help an extra influx of people. Israel says it issues such warnings to try to avoid civilian casualties.

Palestinian officials say 1,115 Palestinians, most of them civilians, have been killed in the fighting since 8 July while Israel has lost 53 soldiers and three civilians - two Israelis and a Thai worker.

In another development, Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, accused Israel of acting like a "rabid dog" and called on Muslims to arm Palestinians to enable them to fight back against "genocide".

'Buried under rubble'


Israeli forces struck by air, sea and land, lighting up the night sky with flare bursts and leaving long plumes of smoke trailing over Gaza City in the morning.

Shells hit a fuel tank supplying the strip's only power station and forced it to shut down, putting already restricted supplies to the city and other areas in jeopardy.

Fifty-five houses were destroyed in the bombing, with people buried under rubble in at least three of them, Palestinian security sources told the BBC.




The unoccupied house of former Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh was destroyed.

"My house is not dearer than any of the houses of our people," he was quoted as saying on a Hamas website afterwards. "The destruction of stones will not break our will and we will continue our resistance until we gain freedom."

Nine other buildings were targeted, and three mosques and four factories were also destroyed.

As well as Hamas TV and radio stations, government buildings, including the finance ministry and a compound belonging to the interior ministry, were attacked.

Gaza's port was also destroyed, Palestinian security sources told the BBC, and two schools and a kindergarten were on fire after being hit.

According to the health ministry, in the past 24 hours 110 people were killed, 60 of them since midnight local time (21:00 GMT Monday).

Seven families were "wiped out" during the night, the ministry said.

The military wing of Hamas said it had fired 14 rockets during the night.

'Painful day'

Five Israeli soldiers were killed on Monday when militants infiltrated the border, while a mortar bomb killed four earlier and a tenth died in a clash in southern Gaza, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said.


In his address on Monday night, Mr Netanyahu said Gaza had to be demilitarised in order to protect Israel.


"We will not finish the operation without neutralising the tunnels, which have the sole purpose of destroying our citizens, killing our children," he said.

"We will continue to act aggressively and responsibly until the mission is completed to protect our citizens, soldiers and children."

Israel's Operation Protective Edge began on 8 July after a surge in militant rocket attacks.

A rally in support of the operation is planned for Tuesday evening in Tel Aviv.

Source: BBC News





World powers divided on Gaza violence


Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Tuesday called Israel a ''rabid dog'' for its attacks on Gaza, and urged Muslims to arm Palestinians to enable them to counter what he termed genocide.

Meanwhile, US lawmakers are pressing the Obama administration to take no action that puts pressure on Israel to halt its military operations.

About 1087 Gazans, most of them civilians, have been killed in 22 days of fighting between Israel and Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip. As well as 53 Israeli soldiers killed, three civilians have died as a result of Palestinian shelling.


In a speech marking the end of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, Khamenei criticised the United States and European countries for what he said were their efforts to limit the military capacity of Palestinian fighters in the enclave.

Of Israel, he said: ''This rabid dog, this rapacious wolf, has attacked innocent people and humanity must show a reaction. This is genocide, a catastrophe of historical scale.

"They have been pounding innocent people day and night and these men, women and children are defending themselves with minimum means, and now Americans and Europeans want to take even that away ... so that those merciless beasts could pound without qualm.''

Khamenei denounced what he said was a ruling by US President Barack Obama to disarm Palestinians - an apparent reference to US opposition to efforts by Hamas, the Islamist group that controls Gaza, to obtain weapons such as missiles and rockets.

Khamenei said Iran took the opposite view about arming Palestinians.

''Everyone, whoever has the means, especially in the Islamic world, they should do what they can to arm the Palestinian nation ... the Zionist regime deeply regrets starting this (war) but has no way out.''

Khamenei's speech to a crowd of hundreds of thousands in Tehran was broadcast live on state television. Khamenei was accompanied by senior government officials.

On the other side of the world, many US congress members have criticised the administration's effort to halt violence.

House Speaker John Boehner (BAY'-nur) said the administration should ''stand with Israel".

‘‘At times like this, people try to isolate Israel,’’ Boehner said.

‘‘We are here to stand with Israel, not just as a broker or observer but as a strong partner and a trusted ally.

‘‘What does that mean? Well, it doesn’t mean issuing vague, on-the-one-hand, on-the-other-hand statements. No, it means backing up our words and showing solidarity with our friend.’’

This week, legislators will discuss a US$225 million (NZ$265m) request from the Defense Department to urgently bolster Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system.

Republicans and Democrats are clashing over whether to approve the funds in a larger spending bill or separately, though no one publicly opposes the payments. Senate appropriators already have approved doubling next year’s money for the system.

Israel launched its offensive on July 8 with the aim of halting rocket attacks by Hamas and its allies. It later ordered a land invasion to find and destroy the warren of Hamas tunnels that criss-crosses the border area.

-Reuters and AP

Israel strikes house of Gaza Hamas leader


Gaza City - Israeli aircraft, tanks and navy gunboats targeted symbols of Hamas control in Gaza City early on Tuesday in the heaviest night of bombardment in three weeks of Israel-Hamas fighting after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned of a "prolonged" campaign in Gaza.

The overnight strikes hit the home of the top Hamas leader in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh, as well as government offices and the headquarters of the Hamas satellite TV station.

Israeli forces fired hundreds of flares that turned the night sky bright orange. By daybreak on Tuesday, a cloud of thick dust from the explosions hung over Gaza City.


A Palestinian health official put the overall Gaza death toll at 1 110. Israel has lost 53 soldiers, including four killed Monday in a mortar attack in southern Israel, along with two civilians and a Thai national.

Escalation

Signalling an escalation of Israel's Gaza operation, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Israelis on Monday to be ready for a "prolonged" war, and the military warned Palestinians in three large neighbourhoods to leave their homes and head immediately for Gaza City.

Plumes of smoke rose above the Al Shorouq media building in central Gaza City which houses the offices of the Hamas-run Al Aqsa television and radio. Hours earlier, at least two major explosions hit the media building, one of the tallest in Gaza, starting a fire on the roof and shaking surrounding buildings.

AP video showed a massive flash as the first strike hit the top of the building, sending debris raining down. The building also houses offices of a number of Arab satellite television news channels.

The Abu Khadra government complex in Gaza City was also badly damaged by the Israeli attacks.

Defiance

Hamas leaders remained defiant in the aftermath of the Israeli onslaught

"My house is not more valuable than the houses of other people, destroying stones will not break our determination," Haniyeh said.

Netanyahu defended the Gaza air and ground offensive, saying in a televised speech Monday that "there is no war more just than this".

The overnight strikes came after a day of heavy Hamas-Israeli fighting in which nine children were killed by a strike on a Gaza park where they were playing, according to Palestinian health officials - a tragedy that each side blamed on the other.

Israeli tanks also resumed heavy shelling in border areas of Gaza, killing five people, including three children and a 70-year-old woman, and wounding 50 in the town of Jebaliya, which was among the areas warned to evacuate, the Red Crescent said.

Many Jebaliya residents said they did not dare attempt an escape. Sufian Abed Rabbo said his extended family of 17 had taken refuge under the stairway in their home.

"God help us. We have nothing to do but pray," the 27-year-old told The Associated Press by phone. "I don't know who left and who stayed, but in our street, we are all very scared to move."

AP


Monday, 28 July 2014

Eight Palestinian children killed as missile slams into UN refugee camp playground

EXCHANGES of fire have killed eight Palestinian children in a Gaza refugee camp and four people in Israel, shattering hopes for an end to three weeks of devastating violence.

The missile that slammed into a public playground in the seafront Shati UN refugee camp on Monday also killed at least two other people and wounded another 46, many of them also children, emergency services said.




Tiny victims ... A relative points at Marwan Hassanein, 4, at the Shifa hospital in Gaza City. Marwan was injured by shrapnel while fleeing with his family on July 20 during Israeli shelling in the Shijaiyah neighbourhood. Picture: AP Source: AP

Soon after, a security source said five Gaza militants were killed in a shootout with troops in southern Israel.

Hamas’s armed wing claimed it killed 10 Israeli soldiers in a raid in the same area, and denied it lost any men.

The latest bloodshed pushed the Palestinian death toll from violence in and around the coastal enclave to more than 1050.

Palestinian medical sources blamed the refugee camp killings on the Israeli military, with witnesses saying the missiles had been fired from a fighter jet.

“An F-16 fired five rockets at a street in Shati camp where children were playing, killing some of them and injuring many more,” one said.

Inside Shifa hospital, an AFP correspondent saw the bodies of at least seven children from the blast at the camp, with more bodies being brought in on bloodied stretchers.

They were unloaded and taken directly to the mortuary.

The Israeli military categorically denied any attack, and said Hamas had aimed the rockets at Israel but that they misfired and hit the camp.

It also blamed an early attack inside the compound of Gaza’s biggest hospital on militant rocket fire that fell short of Israel and struck in the Palestinian territory.

In Israel, at least four people were killed when a mortar round fired from Gaza hit an administrative building in the Eshkol regional council, media reports said, in what was the biggest civilian loss of life inside the Jewish state since the start of the violence.

The latest deaths came after a brief lull in the fighting in Gaza for the beginning of the Muslim festival of Eid al-Fitr, torpedoing hopes of a truce despite intense international pressure.




Following increasingly urgent calls by the UN and the US for an “immediate ceasefire,” a senior source in the West Bank said Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas was heading to Cairo with Hamas representatives for fresh talks on ending the violence.

Earlier US President Barack Obama phoned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to demand an “immediate, unconditional humanitarian ceasefire”, in a call echoed hours later by the UN Security Council.

Mr Obama’s insistence has strained US-Israeli ties and put Netanyahu in a tight spot with hardliners in his government, commentators say.



Israel blames Hamas for Gaza hospital tragedy


Jerusalem - The Israeli army on Monday categorically denied firing on a hospital and a refugee camp in Gaza City, accusing Hamas militants of misfiring their own rockets.

"We have not fired on the hospital or on Shati refugee camp," Major Arye Shalicar told AFP, referring to a strike on a beachfront refugee camp where 10 people were killed, eight of them children.


"We know that Hamas was firing from both areas and the missiles struck these places," he said, indicating that over the past three weeks around 200 missiles fired by Gaza militants had fallen short and landed inside the Gaza Strip.




Sunday, 27 July 2014

ANC welcomes Gaza truce


Johannesburg - The ANC on Sunday welcomed Hamas's acceptance of a 24-hour humanitarian truce between Israel and Palestine.

"It is our hope that all parties... will heed the call for a military ceasefire in pursuit of a peaceful environment conducive to negotiations," African National Congress spokesperson  Zizi Kodwa said in a statement.

"The ANC is encouraged by the efforts of the United Nations at an intervention to end the senseless loss of life in the region.



"We continue to call for the immediate withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza and for all parties to commit themselves to the resumption of negotiations."

The Associated Press on Sunday reported that Hamas agreed to observe the 24-hour truce ahead of the Eid al-Fitr holiday, marking the end of Ramadan.

Hamas had initially rejected the truce. AP reported that the 20-day war has claimed the lives of more 1 050 Palestinians, mainly civilians, according to health officials. More than 40 people have been killed in Israel.

Earlier, the agency reported that about a dozen rockets were fired toward Israel since midnight.

Egypt army destroys more Gaza tunnels


Cairo - Egypt's army said on Sunday it has destroyed 13 more tunnels connecting the Sinai Peninsula to the Gaza Strip, taking to 1 639 the overall number it has laid waste to.

Cairo has poured troops into the peninsula to counter a rising insurgency since the ouster of Islamist president Mohammed Morsi last year, and its security operation involves the destruction of these tunnels.

The Palestinian militant group Hamas, which is the main power in Gaza, reportedly uses the tunnels to smuggle arms, food and money into the blockaded coastal enclave.


Israel has been waging a military offensive on Gaza since 8 July to halt rocket fire, and it launched a ground assault on 17 July aimed at destroying the network of tunnels.

It accuses Hamas of using the tunnels to attacks on Israel.

Ties between Hamas and Cairo have deteriorated since the Egyptian army deposed Morsi on 3 July 2013. Hamas is an affiliate of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood.

Cairo also accuses of Hamas of being involved in militant attacks inside Egypt, which have multiplied since Morsi was toppled.

Militant groups say their attacks are in retaliation for a police crackdown on Morsi's supporters.

The crackdown has seen more than 1 400 people killed in street clashes.

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