Israel 'to destroy' Hamas Gaza tunnels - Netanyahu
Israel
will not stop its operation in Gaza until the tunnels constructed by
Hamas militants have been destroyed, PM Benjamin Netanyahu has said.
He said he was determined to destroy the tunnels, which
militants use to infiltrate Israeli territory, "with or without a
ceasefire".
Some 425,000 people - about a quarter of Gaza's population - have been displaced by the fighting, the UN says.
It said the people there were "facing a precipice", and called for action.
Since Israel began its offensive in Gaza on 8 July, 1,400
Palestinians have been killed, most of them civilians, according to the
Gaza Health Ministry.
It said 173 people had been killed within the past 24 hours.
Some 58 Israelis have been killed, of whom 56 were soldiers and two civilians. A Thai worker in Israel has also died.
Most of Hamas' rockets into Israel are intercepted and destroyed by Israel's Iron Dome missile defence system.
The BBC has seen evidence
that appears to confirm hackers stole several secret military documents
from two government-owned Israeli companies that developed the Iron
Dome.
The UN has strongly condemned the continuing violence, urging
both sides to agree to daily pauses in the fighting to help relief
efforts.
"The reality of Gaza today is that no place is safe," UN humanitarian chief Baroness Valerie Amos told the Security Council.
The head of Unrwa, the main UN relief agency in Gaza, warned that "the population is facing a precipice".
"Should further large-scale displacement indeed occur, the
occupying power (Israel), according to international humanitarian law,
will have to assume direct responsibility to assist these people,"
Pierre Kraehenbuehl said.
Earlier on Thursday Israel called up 16,000 reservists, fuelling speculation that the ground campaign would be widened.
But the Israeli army told the BBC that the new reservists would relieve a similar number who were standing down.
The army said a total of 59,000 reservists were deployed in Gaza.
Tunnel threat
Israel's offensive, named Operation Protective Edge, began with a focus on Hamas' rocket-launching capability.
But it has since expanded to take in the threat from tunnels.
After air strikes began, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF)
discovered an extensive network of tunnels leading from Gaza into
Israel.
Hamas militants have launched several attacks from the tunnels, penetrating Israeli territory and killing a number of soldiers.
Reports from Israel suggest the discovery of the tunnels - and
the reality that infiltrators have used them to kill Israelis inside
their own country - has shocked many Israelis and bolstered support for
the operation.
It launched a ground operation to destroy the tunnels on the
night of 17 July, and insists that any ceasefire deal includes the right
to continue that mission.
"I won't agree to any proposal that will not enable the
Israeli military to complete this important task for the sake of
Israel's security," Mr Netanyahu said.
The tunnels would allow Hamas to "abduct and murder civilians
and IDF soldiers while simultaneously attacking from the tunnels
penetrating our territory," he added.
Gaza 'desperate'
On the ground in Gaza, Israeli shelling continued on Thursday morning, the BBC's Jon Donnison reports.
Meanwhile, a series of rocket alert sirens sounded across
southern Israel. Sirens in the town of Sderot sounded several times as
Mr Netanyahu spoke.
In the most controversial incident on Wednesday, at least 16
people were killed when shells hit a UN-run school in the Jabaliya
district of Gaza City.
The UN said "all available evidence" suggested Israeli artillery was the cause.
Spokesman Mark Regev told the BBC that Israel would apologise if it discovered it was responsible.
"We have a policy - we don't target civilians," he said.
"It's not clear to us that it was our fire but we know for a
fact there was hostile fire on our people from the vicinity of the
school."
Later on Wednesday at least 17 were killed in a strike on a busy market in Shejaiya - a district already badly damaged by Israeli artillery.
Israel occupied Gaza in the 1967 Middle East war and only pulled its troops and settlers out in 2005.
Israel considered this the end of the occupation, but it
still exercises control over most of Gaza's borders, water and airspace.
Egypt controls Gaza's southern border.
Hamas says it will not stop fighting until a blockade, maintained by both Israel and Egypt, is lifted.
0 comments:
Post a Comment