Tuesday, September 19, 2006
Sunday, July 30, 2006
Beirut/Tel Aviv (dpa) - An Israeli raid Sunday on a building sheltering civilians east of the southern port city of Tyre, killed over 50 people and wounded several others, witnesses and police said.
It was the highest casualty toll in any single incident since the fighting between Israel and Hizbollah guerrillas began on July 12.
Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Seniora and House Speaker Nabih Berri said after the number of casualties became known that "there will be no negotiations with Israel until there is an immediate and unconditional ceasefire."
But Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert told his ministers at the start of Sunday's cabinet meeting that Israel was in no hurry to agree to a truce before it achieved its aims in the fighting.
"Israel is in no rush to reach a ceasefire before we get to that point where we could say that we reached the main objectives we had set forth," he said.
"I can see at least 18 dead and several are still under the rubble," a witness at the scene of the bombing told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.
"Most of the killed are children and women," said the witness.
"I can say this is a massacre. Most of the people here have fled other areas to hide from the Israeli bombardment from other areas in southern Lebanon," a Red cross volunteer at the scene told dpa.
"There are several wounded under the rubble and we are having still difficulty to evacuate them," he added.
"This is the same scene I saw in 1996 ... at least 20 children are among the dead," a witness told dpa.
The witness said the residential area was targeted by fifty shells since dawn.
The building was housing refugees in the village of Qana, east of Tyre. A massacre took place in the same village in 1996 when Israeli shells hit a UN shelter, killing 109 people.
"This is a collective punishment against the civilians in southern Lebanon," Information Minister Ghazi Aridi said.
An Israeli army spokesman said the Hizbollah guerrilla group had launched "numerous attacks" from the area, but would not say why that specific building had been targeted.
Israeli ground troops, meanwhile, extended their operations in southern Lebanon, moving northwards to battle Hizbollah militiamen in the village of Taibe.
An army spokeswoman said two soldiers had so far been injured in the fighting, and three Hizbollah fighters had been hit.
The 19th day of the fighting between Israel and Hizbollah had begun with the Israel Air Force bombing Lebanon and the Iranian-backed guerrilla group launching missiles at northern Israeli towns.
An army spokeswoman said the air force flew over 40 raids overnight, bombing 10 structures used by Hizbollah and attacking roads used by the guerrillas to move their missiles.
Hizbollah fired around 40 rockets at northern Israel Sunday morning. No injuries were reported.
United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was expected meanwhile to continue her talks Sunday with Israeli officials, among them Defence Minister Amir Peretz and Foreign Minister Tzippi Livni.
Rice met Prime Minister Ehud Olmert late Saturday night, shortly after arriving back in the region for her second mediation trip in less than a week.
During their two-hour meeting they discussed conditions for the deployment of an international peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon.
Israel has said its aims in the fighting include having the Lebanese army deploy in the south, bolstered by an international force, significantly weakening Hizbollah's military ability, and securing the release of of two Israeli soldiers abducted by Hizbollah on June 12 during a cross-border raid.
The incident sparked Israel's major offensive against Hizbollah and other targets in Lebanon.
Monday, July 10, 2006
Most areas of the Gaza Strip are currently experiencing an extremely difficult period -- Israeli warplanes and tanks never stop, day or night, firing heavy artillery against every target possible.
Homes, institutions and infrastructure never escape the Israeli shelling; power and water plants have been severely hit so far, main roads have been damaged, buildings and homes have been shelled.
Moreover, civilians along with resistance fighters have been killed and wounded due to such non-stop Israeli aggression, while the lives of Gaza Strip residents have reverted to the way things were in 1967, when Israeli occupation forces occupied the Gaza Strip, the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
In one of the Strip's many refugee camps, a camp called Maghazi in the central part of the Gaza Strip, two Palestinian children laid down on top of sand bags, which had been placed on the entrance of their alley. “Why are you lying there?”, I asked the boys – Ibrahim, 9, and Ahmad, 14.
"We are lying here with our 'rifles' to defend our camp from the Israeli forces, we will kill them if they enter the camp "
In the main street in Maghazi, which is about 300 meters long, many sand bags have been placed by resistance fighters, apparently as a sort of defense against a likely Israeli attack on the camp. Sand bags, dirt piles, rocks blocking roads are being placed in various areas in light of Israeli military announcement that they will reinvade the 'liberated' Gaza Strip, to release an Israeli soldier who is being held by Palestinian resistance fighters.
Ibrahim and Ahmad, the two school children , have found no enjoyment in the fact that they are off school, and on summer holiday. Instead, they find themselves without food, without potable water, lying on top of sand bags and holding wood rifles, instead of enjoying the holiday as other children around the world are able to.
Senior Palestinian residents say that this situation resembles, to a great extent, the first days of the Israeli-Arab war of 1967, when the Gaza Strip fell into the hands of the Israeli occupation forces.
Munir Abdullah 60, of Maghazi refugee camp, says, "In June 1967, the Israeli forces waged a sweeping war in which they occupied the Gaza Strip including Maghazi. On that day, the people fled their homes, seeking refuge, while many others including resistance men placed the sand bags in every corner of the camp as you see here today."
"My brother Fathi, who was then 17 years old was defending the camp, like many others, behind sand bags, and he was shot and killed by the Israeli forces", Munir says.
"What the Israelis are doing is reversing the wheel of history four decades back; they are destroying everything, they are killing people in streets, I feel I have never grown up, I feel I am re-living 1967, when Israel first occupied the Gaza Strip as they are now about to reoccupy it."
The Israeli government has recently decided to gradually launch a military attack on the Gaza Strip, intending to reoccupy it, under the pretext of releasing a soldier, who was captured by some resistance fighters in the southern Gaza Strip city of Rafah a few days ago.
Because of the latest Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip, about 1.3 million Palestinians have been forced to live primitively; with candlelights at night, small radios in their hands and with sand bags on streets; all are worried about imminent Israeli invasions of their areas.
The Israeli occupation have closed all border crossings and commercial outlets, preventing the entry of any single person, food or even a single tank of gas. An entire population, already suffering from international aid cuts due to their democratic choice of a Hamas government in January 2006 elections, are now huddled in the darkness, behind sandbags, watching the thousands of Israeli tanks lined up on the border, and fearing for the worst
Friday, June 09, 2006
Tuesday, May 23, 2006
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