Violence has reverberated across Gaza with four Palestinians killed in Israeli air strikes as Egypt proposed a new ceasefire that would open key crossings into the blockaded territory.
Since an earlier ceasefire arrangement collapsed on August 19, the death toll in Gaza has risen steadily with 106 Palestinians killed in more than 350 Israeli air strikes across the territory.
Over the same period, more than 650 rockets have struck Israeli territory, one of which killed a four-year-old boy over the weekend, army figures show.
Around 100 rockets were shot down.
Since midnight, Israeli air strikes on northern Gaza have killed four Palestinians, including two women and a three-year-old boy, medics said on Monday, raising the Palestinian death toll to 2124 in seven weeks of violence.
On the Israeli side, 68 people have been killed, four of them civilians and the rest soldiers.
Another 38 rockets fired from Gaza struck the Israeli south on Sunday, while another was shot down, army statistics showed.
Following a weekend of heavy fire on the south, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insisted Israel would not be worn down by persistent rocket fire and that the operation would not end until quiet was restored.
"Our enemies ... will not succeed in wearing us down. Against their attrition, they will be struck very hard," he said on Sunday, warning that Israel would hit any place from which militants were firing, including homes.
His remarks came as the air force stepped up its campaign against rocket fire, firing missiles which levelled a 12-storey residential block.
But by early Monday, there was increasing chatter about a possible new ceasefire agreement which would see the delegations return to Cairo to resume talks on an Egyptian proposal to broker a more permanent end to the violence.
"There is an idea for a temporary ceasefire that opens the crossings, allows aid and reconstruction material, and the disputed points will be discussed in a month," a senior Palestinian official told AFP in Cairo.
"We would be willing to accept this, but are waiting for the Israeli response to this proposal," he said, requesting anonymity because of the sensitivity of the negotiations.
Another Palestinian official said Egypt might invite Palestinian and Israeli negotiating teams to return to Cairo within 48 hours.
"Efforts are ongoing to reach an agreement," Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri told Agence France-Presse, without going into specifics.
And Daud Shihab, Islamic Jihad's spokesman, also confirmed such efforts were under way.
"The success of contacts (talks) to reach a ceasefire depends on Palestinian demands being met," he told AFP.
There was no immediate comment from Israel, with Netanyahu's spokesman Mark Regev refusing to comment on the matter and saying Israel's position of no negotiations under fire had "not changed".
Egypt has repeatedly urged all parties to accept an open-ended truce and return to the negotiating table in Cairo.
Share
