| January 6, 2009 Gaza truce proposed after Israeli shell kills 30
|
GAZA CITY, Gaza (AP) - France and Egypt announced an initiative
to stop the fighting in Gaza late Tuesday, hours after Israeli
mortar shells exploded near a U.N. school sheltering hundreds of
people displaced by the onslaught on Hamas militants. At least 30
Palestinians died, staining streets with blood.
The Egyptian and French presidents didn't release details of
their proposal, saying only that it involved an immediate
cease-fire to permit humanitarian aid into Gaza and talks to settle
the differences between Israel and the Islamic militants of Hamas
who rule the small coastal territory.
They said they were awaiting a response from Israel. Israeli
officials in Jerusalem declined immediate comment on the
announcement, which came amid diplomatic efforts by the U.S. and
other nations to resolve a conflict that has seen 600 people killed
in 11 days.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice weclomed the initiative, but
cautioned that no agreement would succeed unless it halted Hamas
rocket attacks on Israel and arms smuggling into Gaza.
Earlier in the day, President-elect Barack Obama broke his
silence on the crisis, saying that "the loss of civilian life in
Gaza and in Israel is a source of deep concern for me." He
declined to go further, reiterating his stance that the U.S. has
only one president at a time.
Israel's military said its shelling at the school - the
deadliest single episode since Israeli ground forces invaded Gaza
on Saturday after
a week of air bombardment - was a response to
mortar fire from within the school and said Hamas militants were
using civilians as cover.
Two residents of the area who spoke with The Associated Press by
telephone said they saw a small group of militants firing mortar
rounds from a street near the school, where 350 people had gathered
to get away from the shelling. They spoke on condition of anonymity
for fear of reprisal.
Majed Hamdan, an AP photographer, rushed to the scene shortly
after the attacks. At the hospital, he said, many children were
among the dead.
"I saw women and men - parents - slapping their faces in grief,
screaming, some of them collapsed to the floor. They knew their
children were dead," he said. "In the morgue, most of the killed
appeared to be children. In the hospital, there wasn't enough space
for the wounded."
He said there appeared to be marks on the pavement of five
separate explosions in area of the school.
An Israeli defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity
because he was not allowed to make the information public, said it
appeared the military used 120-mm shells, among the largest mortar
rounds.
U.N. officials demanded an investigation of the shelling. The
carnage, which included 55 wounded, added to a surging civilian
toll and drew mounting international pressure for Israel to end the
offensive against Hamas.
At a news conference in Sharm-el-Sheik, Egypt, Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak said the truce proposal offered by him and
French President Sarkozy envisioned an immediate end to combat, so
humanitarian supplies can safely enter Gaza.
Mubarak said the plan also calls for an urgent meeting between
Israel and the Palestinians to discuss ways to resolve the conflict
and provide necessary guarantees to ensure fighting doesn't erupt
again.
There was no indication of the plan's chances. Sarkozy said at
the news conference that he saw it as a "small hope" for ending
the Gaza violence.
Sarkozy said he had spoken to Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
to inform him of the initiaitve and was awaiting a response.
In Jerusalem, Olmert's spokesman, Mark Regev, told AP: "We are
holding off comments on that for the time being."
At U.N. headquarters, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
welcomed the proposal. "I express my support for the plan set in
motion today by President Mubarak and President Sarkozy," said
Abbas, who was in New York for a Security Council meeting on the
Gaza crisis.
Israeli officials have said any cease-fire agreement must
prevent further rocket attacks by Gaza militants and put in place
measures to prevent the smuggling of missile and other weapons into
the small Palestinian territory.
Rice told the Security Council meeting that the U.S. understood
the growing desire for a cease-fire. "In this regard, we are
pleased by, and wish to commend, the statement of the president of
Egypt and to follow up on that initiative," she said.
But Rice added that any solution must address Israel's security.
"There must be a solution this time that does not allow Hamas
to use Gaza as a launching pad against Israeli cities. It has to be
a solution that does not allow the rearmament of Hamas, and it must
be a solution that finds a way to open (border) crossings so that
Palestinians in Gaza can have a normal life," she said.
In the wake of the criticism over civilian casualties, Israel
agreed to set up a "humanitarian corridor" to ship vital supplies
into the Gaza Strip, an idea that had been raised by the U.N.
Security Council. Under the plan, Israel would suspend attacks in
certain areas to allow people to get supplies.
At U.N. headquarters, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called the
Israeli bombardment of U.N. facilities in Gaza "totally
unacceptable." Israel's shells have fallen around three schools,
including the girls school hit Tuesday, and a health center for
Palestinian refugees.
Ban added that it was "equally unacceptable" for militants to
take actions that endanger Palestinian civilians, referring to the
practice of militants making attacks from residential areas.
Some 15,000 Palestinians have packed the U.N.'s 23 Gaza schools
because their homes were destroyed or to flee the violence. The
U.N. provided the Israeli military with GPS coordinates for all of
them.
The three mortar shells that crashed down on the perimeter of
the U.N. school struck at midafternoon, when many people in the
densely populated camp were outside getting some fresh air,
thinking an area around a school was safe.
Images recorded by a cameraman from AP Television News showed
crowds fleeing the scene, pavements smeared with blood and battered
bodies being carried off by medics and bystanders. A youth who
limped away was helped along by several others. Sandals lay
scattered on the pavement by a pock-marked wall.
"There's nowhere safe in Gaza. Everyone here is terrorized and
traumatized," said John Ging, head of Gaza operations for the
United Nations Relief and Works Agency.
An Israeli military statement said it received intelligence that
the dead at the girls school included Hamas operatives, among them
members of a rocket-launching squad. It identified two of them as
Imad Abu Askar and Hassan Abu Askar.
Two residents who spoke to an AP reporter by phone said the two
brothers were known to be low-level Hamas militants. They said a
group of militants - one of them said four - were firing mortar
shells from near the school.
An Israeli shell targeted the men, but missed and they fled, the
witnesses said. Then another three shells landed nearby, exploding
among civilians, they said, refusing to allow their names to be
published because they feared for their safety.
A total of 71 Palestinians were killed Tuesday - with just two
confirmed as militants, Gaza health officials said.
An Israeli infant was wounded by one of about two dozen rockets
fired into southern Israel by Gaza militants.
Eleven Israelis have been killed since the offensive began:
three civilians and a soldier by rocket fire and seven soldiers in
the ground offensive, according to Isaeli officials.
---
Associated Press writers Ibrahim Barzak reported this story from
Gaza City and Jason Keyser from Jerusalem.
(Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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