Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Gaza death toll hits 514:Daily Sun

  GAZA CITY: The UN Security Council called for an “immediate ceasefire” as Israel pressed on with a blistering assault on Gaza on Monday taking the Palestinian death toll above 500, report agencies. As world efforts to end the fighting gathered pace, Israel said it killed 10 Hamas militants in an early morning gun battle in southern Israel after they used a tunnel to get across the border. US Pre
sident Barack Obama echoed the call for an immediate ceasefire in a telephone conversation with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu early Monday, as Secretary of State John Kerry headed to the region to join truce efforts. Meanwhile, several Nobel laureates are calling for an arms embargo against Israel over the ongoing aggression against the Palestinian Gaza Strip. A fresh Israeli air strike killed a family of nine, including seven children, in the southern city of Rafah, early Monday, emergency services said. It came after after more than 150 Palestinians were killed on Sunday, the deadliest day so far of an offensive now in its 14th day. The Israeli army said 13 soldiers had been killed inside Gaza on Sunday, raising to 18 the number of soldiers killed since a ground operation began late on Thursday. They were the army’s heaviest losses in eight years and left Israelis too in mourning. A weekend of incessant Israeli bombardment by land, sea and air sent thousands of terrified Palestinian civilians fleeing their homes. Additional deaths across Gaza Monday pushed the Palestinian toll to at least 508, not counting the 10 militants who sneaked into southern Israel through a cross-border tunnel. “Two terrorist squads infiltrated Israel through a tunnel from northern Gaza. IDF aircraft struck one; IDF forces killed 10 terrorists,” the army said. Several Israeli soldiers were wounded in the exchange, which took place near kibbutz Niram close to the Erez crossing, army radio said. The attack was claimed by Hamas armed wing the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, which said it had carried out “an operation behind enemy lines in response to the massacre in Shejaiya.” It was referring to a neighbourhood between Gaza City and the Israeli border, where a ferocious Israeli bombardment, which began early Sunday, killed at least 72 Palestinians. Several Nobel laureates, including Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Mairead Maguire, are calling for an arms embargo against Israel over the ongoing aggression against the Palestinian Gaza Strip. In an open letter, the sixty-four signatories denounce Israel for once again to use its full force against the captive Palestinian population, particularly in the Gaza Strip. The signatories describe Israel’s ongoing military operations as inhumane and illegal act of military aggression. The signatories argue, that an arms embargo against Israel is the right approach to reducing Israel’s ability to launch such devastating attacks as those seen in the Gaza Strip in recent days, with impunity, saying that this ability in part stems from the vast international military cooperation and trade Israel maintains with countries across the world. The signatories stress that Israel is field testing its weapons on the Palestinian population. Israel ranks among the world’s top exporters of weapons. In 2012, Israeli defence exports skyrocketed to a record of $7.47 billion, making it the world’s sixth-largest exporter of arms. Even though, the state receives vast funding from the E.U. and its member states and the USA. The 30% increase in global arms sales, compared with 2011 levels, positions Israel’s total weapons exports, behind the US, UK, Russia, China and Germany and ahead of France and Italy. Israel is using the fact that its latest weapons have been field-tested on Palestinians as sales pitch. Among the weapons Israel reportedly field tested on Palestinians are Dense Inert Metal Explosive (DIME) munitions, depleted uranium munitions and incendiary munitions including white phosphor. DIME munitions contain tungsten and are carcinogenic. Depleted Uranium has according to independent researchers caused an epidemic rise in birth defects in Iraq. Mairead_Corrigan-MaguireThe signatories call on the governments of UN member states across the world to take immediate steps to implement a comprehensive, and legally binding military embargo against Israel, similar to that imposed on South Africa during Apartheid. The South African Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu repeatedly compared Israel’s policies toward Palestine with South Africa’s Apartheid. Tutu also endorses the Boycott Divestment and Sanctions campaign against Israel for similar reasons. Besides Archbishop Tutu, the letter was also signed by Nobel peace laureates Mairead Maguire, Adolfo Peres Esquivel, Betty Williams, Jody Williams, and Rigoberta Michú. Other signatories include former U.S. Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, musician Roger Waters, Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Chris Hedges, among others.Mairead Maguire is also an outspoken opponent to media’s biased representation of conflicts, including the Israeli – Palestinian conflict and the ongoing conflict in Syria. Late on Sunday, the Hamas armed wing said it had captured an Israeli soldier it named as Shaul Aaron. The army said it was checking the reports, but Israel’s UN ambassador Ron Prosor said the claim was untrue. Hamas militants held Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit for more than five years until his release in a 2011 exchange for more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners. The UN Security Council held urgent talks on the conflict late Sunday, expressing “serious concern” about the rising death toll and demanding “an immediate cessation of hostilities.” Palestinian UN envoy Ryad Mansour voiced frustration with what he termed the world body’s failure to take a strong stand. Several hours later, Obama telephoned Netanyahu to echo calls for an “immediate ceasefire.” UN chief Ban Ki-moon, who is currently in the region to bolster truce efforts, also urged Israel to “exercise maximum restraint” saying: “Too many innocent people are dying.” Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas were to hold talks in Qatar on Monday a day later than planned. So far, ceasefire proposals have been rejected by Hamas, which has laid out a long list of demands it wants Israel to agree to, including an end to its blockade of Gaza and the release of scores of prisoners. On the ground in Gaza, hundreds of people could be seen fleeing the northern area of Beit Hanun, a day after tens of thousands fled Shejaiya. So far, some 83,000 people have taken shelter in some 60 schools run by the UN agency for Palestinian refugees UNRWA. On Sunday, at least 72 people were killed in Shejaiya after hours of non-stop shelling reduced much of the neighbourhood to rubble and left bodies lying in the streets. The high civilian death toll in Gaza, including children, has sparked mounting international concern. But Netanyahu has insisted that civilian casualties are the result of Hamas using innocents “as human shields.” And he insisted Sunday that there was “very strong support” from the international community for Israel’s operation. Although Israel said earlier Sunday it was expanding its ground operation to destroy tunnels used by militants to carry out cross-border attacks and fire rockets, Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon suggested it could end within days. Since the operation began on July 8, Palestinian militants have fired 1,414 rockets and mortar rounds that hit Israel, with the Iron Dome air defence system intercepting another 377, the army said.

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