Israeli warplanes continue to pound Gaza as world urges calm
The death toll in Gaza had reached 172, with another 1,230 wounded
By : DC Correspondent
Update: 2014-07-14 21:08 GMT
Jerusalem: Israel kept up its punishing raids on Gaza on Monday but held off from a threatened ground incursion as the world intensified efforts to broker a truce.
With Israel's campaign to halt cross-border rocket fire entering its seventh day, the Arab League was to hold an emergency meeting to discuss moves to end "the shedding of Palestinian civilians' blood" and formulate a common Arab stance on the crisis.
And UN chief Ban Ki-moon called on Israel to scrap plans for a ground offensive, saying "too many" Palestinian civilians had been killed as the death toll from its punishing air campaign hit 172, with another 1,230 wounded.
The Gaza-based Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) has said more than three-quarters of the victims were civilians.
But, despite preparations for a possible ground attack, Israel appeared to be holding off with media reports saying that ministers attending a Sunday evening meeting of the security cabinet had decided against putting boots on the ground — for the time being.
Smoke rises after an Israeli missile strike in Gaza City, on Monday. (Photo: AP)
During the night, Israeli warplanes struck more than 40 sites, killing two people, and artillery pounded the north where Israel warned residents to flee for their lives ahead of a major operation.
Over the past 24 hours, more than 17,000 Palestinians, most of them from northern Gaza, have packed into a handful of schools run by the UN agency for Palestinian refugees in a bid to seek some respite from the bombing. Inside the New Gaza Boys School in Gaza City, every classroom was packed full of people, with blankets strung across doorways to provide some privacy.
Palestinian mourners cry in a house after the bodies of Mousa Abu
Muamer, 56, and his son Saddam, 27, who were killed in an overnight
Israeli missile strike at their house in the outskirts of the town of
Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, were brought in during their funeral
procession, on Monday. (Photo: AP)
"We feel safer here, but the situation is tough, there's very little food and water and nothing for the children to do," said 27-year-old Rehab, from Beit Lahiya. "We're sleeping on the tiles of the classroom floor."
A Palestinian girl, who hospital officials said was wounded in an Israeli air strike that killed her mother and two of her siblings, receiving treatment at a Gaza hospital. (Reuters photo)
Hamas drone downed
Israeli defence minister Moshe Yaalon said that so far, the operation had caused "huge" damage to Hamas.
Palestinians offer their prayers over the grave of a member of the
al-Batsh family who was killed in Saturday's Israeli airstrike, during
a funeral procession in Gaza City on Sunday. (Photo: AP)
"When Hamas leaders come out of their hiding places, they will see the scale of destruction and damage we have caused them, which will cause them to regret ever beginning this round of fighting against Israel," he said in a statement.
A Palestinian medic walks amid debris of a house which police said was destroyed in an Israeli air strike in Rafah in southern Gaza Strip. (Reuters photo)
A senior military official said the army was using a so-called "pain map," hitting targets seen as most valuable to Hamas.
"This will impair its abilities and force it into a difficult process, as long as possible, of post-war rehabilitation," he told reporters, speaking on condition of anonymity. "The harder we hit them, the longer and more difficult the process, and more effective the deterrence," he added.
But Hamas has continued to hit back.
A Palestinian mourner chants slogans on the grave of a member of
the al-Batsh family who were killed in Saturday's Israeli airstrike,
during a funeral procession in Gaza City on Sunday. (Photo: AP)
Early Monday, the army said it had used Patriot surface-to-air-missile to shoot down a drone (UAV) off the Ashdod coastline, 28 kilometres (17 miles) north of Gaza.
Hamas's armed wing took responsibility for the drone in a Hebrew-language posting on Twitter, which said it had launched "a number of UAVs deep inside the Zionist enemy entity," pledging to give further details later.
Rockets from Syria, Lebanon
With a growing number of Palestinian civilians among the dead, international efforts to end the bloodshed have taken on a renewed sense of urgency. Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas has called for the United Nations to put the state of Palestine under "international protection" due to the worsening violence in Gaza, with the bid to be discussed at Monday's Arab League meeting in Cairo.
US secretary of state John Kerry on Sunday reiterated Washington's willingness to help mediate a truce and has been talking to regional leaders, a senior state department official said. Washington has no direct contacts with Hamas, so all efforts would likely be channelled through Qatar and Egypt.
Smoke rises after an Israeli missile strike in Gaza City, on Monday. (Photo: AP)
Top diplomats from Germany and Italy were also due in the region to bolster truce efforts.
So far, no Israelis have been killed since the operation began on July 8, despite 777 rockets hitting Israel and more then 200 others intercepted, the army says.
Late on Sunday, a rocket fired from Syria hit the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, and several hours later, two rockets fired from southern Lebanon struck northern Israel.
In both cases, there were no injuries but troops fired back at the source of fire, raising fears that the conflict in and around Gaza could spread.
Meanwhile, a Palestinian was shot dead in clashes with soldiers in the southern West Bank, his family said, with the army confirming troops had fired on people throwing stones and molotov cocktails.
Overnight, troops arrested 23 people, with the Ramallah-based Palestinian Prisoners Club saying 11 of them were Hamas MPs.
Saudi Arabia pledged $53.3 million to pay for medicine and medical equipment to treat the victims of the Gaza crisis, a minister announced late Sunday, saying the aid would be transferred through the Palestinian Red Crescent.
Watch Video: Gaza residents flee after Israeli warning