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UN slams Syria for violence
Syria government forces are still carrying out 'massive' rights abuses, says UN leader Ban Ki-moon in a grim assessment of the conflict.
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Israel trying to 'wipe out our people'
Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas slams Israel as the Gaza death toll nears 1,000 on the 18th day of fighting in the strip.
Israel's army fought street battles with Hamas fighters in Gaza's main city on Tuesday and bombarded the southern border from the air as the death toll from its war on Hamas neared the 1,000 mark.
"This is the 18th day of the Israeli aggression against our people, which is becoming more ferocious each day as the number of victims rises," Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas said as terrified Gaza residents fled for their lives.
"Israel is keeping up this aggression to wipe out our people over there," added Abbas, speaking from his base in the West Bank.
Israeli special forces backed by tanks and air strikes barrelled their way ever deeper into Gaza's City, advancing several hundred metres (yards) into several neighbourhoods in the south, witnesses said. The thud of tank shells and the crackle of gunfire echoed through much of the day.
Although there were no reports of air strikes in the evening, residents reported extensive gunbattles in Zeitun neighbourhood and Jabaliya refugee campon the city outskirts, where Apache helicopter gunships were also in action.
Palestinian medical sources said around 70 people were killed on Tuesday, bringing the overall toll to around 975 Palestinians, with a further 4,400 wounded.
Ten Israeli soldiers and three civilians have been killed in combat or by rocket attacks since December 27, when the Jewish state began its deadliest ever offensive on Gaza, ruled by the Islamist Hamas movement since mid-2007.
Israel also carried out a wave of bombing raids on the border town of Rafah, sending hundreds of people fleeing onto the streets.
"There are continuous airstrikes along the Egyptian border - about 60 families have all fled their houses which are situated several hundred metres from the border," Jawad Harb, a Palestinian working for the international aid agency CARE, told AFP as a series of deafening blasts echoed in the background.
The UN's humanitarian office OCHA said the exact number of people who had fled their homes was unknown but added that more than 35,000 displaced people spent the night in temporary shelters, an increase of more than 7,400 on the previous 24 hours.
The Israeli military said its warplanes had attacked more than 100 targets since early on Monday morning, including 55 weapons-smuggling tunnels in southern Gaza.
Eighteen rockets and mortar rounds were fired into Israel, an army spokesman said, barely a quarter of the number recorded at the start of the offensive. No casualties were reported.
Israel's military chief said Operation Cast Lead was making progress but warned that troops faced "complicated" conditions in Gaza City, home to more than half a million Palestinians and where Israel has little combat experience.
"We have already achieved a lot against both Hamas's infrastructure and its military wing but we still have work to be done," the chief of staff, Lieutenant General Gabi Ashkenazi, told lawmakers.
A Hamas delegation is currently in Cairo for talks on a Western-backed proposal drawn up by President Hosni Mubarak to end the fighting.
A senior source in Cairo indicated Egypt was getting increasingly frustrated at Hamas's response so far to its initiative, saying "they need to say 'yes', now, to our plan."
One of Hamas's top leaders, Mussa Abu Marzuk, acknowledged the movement had "substantial observations" about the initiative but said there was "still a chance" they would accept the plan.
Hillary Clinton, due to take over as US secretary of state in a week's time, said Barack Obama's administration would make "every effort" to forge peace but ruled out talks with Hamas until it recognised Israel's right to exist.
"You cannot negotiate with Hamas until it renounces violence, recognises Israel and agrees to abide by past agreements," she told a Senate confirmation hearing. "That is just for me an absolute."
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and with Mubarak, pressing them "for the specific measures necessary to deliver a full and sustainable ceasefire" in line with last week's UN Security Council Resolution.
Brown's office said he was "deeply troubled" by the suffering in Gaza, urged Israel to respect its humanitarian commitments and called on Arab leaders to "say more clearly that Hamas must disarm."
Egypt and Saudi Arabia blocked a proposal by Qatar for an extraordinary summit on the crisis later this week by saying discussions should instead take place at a summit in Kuwait already scheduled for January 19.
Aid agencies have warned of a growing humanitarian crisis in the territory where the vast majority of the 1.5 million population depends on foreign aid and is already reeling from 18 months of punishing Israeli blockade.
"Israeli bombardment is causing extensive destruction to homes and to public infrastructure throughout the Gaza Strip and is jeopardizing water, sanitation and medical services," said an OCHA field report.
"As of this morning, 60 percent of Gazans are not receiving any power. The rest receive electricity intermittently."
Your Comments
Israel broke the ceasefire
Worth mentioning the Amnesty International, Nov 5, 2008 report - "The activities in the past 24 hours could spell the end of a five-and-a-half-month ceasefire. This would once again put the civilian populations of Gaza and southern Israel in the line of fire. The killing of six Palestinian militants in Gaza by Israeli forces in a ground incursion and air strikes on 4 November was followed by a barrage of dozens of Palestinian rockets which broke the ceasefire, a result of Israels action,"
Israel
Israel doesn't want peace, never has and never will. Real and lasting peace will slowly but surely diminish Israel and will eventually cause its decline because a free Palestinian State would exceed Israel not just demographically but also economically. Jews would become a minority and would be what they always were throughout their entire history - a minority religious group. Continuous war, occupation and deliberate massacres are what keep Israel going; Palestinian blood is Israel's oxygen.
They're our people as well!
Despite the cultural differences, and regardless of Israeli attempts to demonise them, the people of Gaza are our people as well. They are our fellow human beings. This latest Israeli genocide is just beyond words. Both the genocide itself, and the pathetic and gutless Western response to it have undermined civilisation everywhere. Where are the human rights commissions and war crimes tribunals and courts of justice now, or are these things nothing more than cynical instruments of the powerful?
Israel be brave and goodluck
Poor Israel, I can't imagine what it must be to live in a country that is terrorized daily by bombs and terrorists. I hope things get better. It doesn't look like they have ever had any peace, even since world war 2. I wonder why no one cares about the Israelis. I am on their side, and I think that they have suffered really bad.
Useful search term - "British Gas Gaza'.....
Why has Tony Blair been so keen to "negotiate" in Egypt and in Israel? The gas fields offshore of Egypt and Gaza being drilled by British Gas' US-based partner, Noble Energy - and Israel is keen to cut Hamas out of any benefit whatsoever event hough they were only to get a minimal 10% of the royalties. Same reason the USA is keen to continue to "negotiate" directly. Blood for oil or gas, uhh! This is well-known on Israel's Haaretz and JPost media sites and in Egypt but not elsewhere.
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