A leader of the Palestinian group Hamas says the
group has agreed to try anew a ceasefire with Israel, after six days of
bloodshed in and around the Gaza Strip.
"Our Egyptian brothers have asked us to completely stop firing at
Israel: we told the Egyptians that we agree to exchange quiet for quiet
with Israel," Ayman Taha, the leader, said.
An official close to Hamas said on Saturday that the truce would take effect from midnight (21:00 GMT).
Earlier, Palestinian officials said the latest attacks brough the
number of people killed so far in Israeli attacks on Saturday to three,
and to 15 since this round of violence erupted on Monday.
Palestinian medics said the dead included a little child and that at least 24 others had been wounded.
One attack by an Israeli drone killed a Palestinian man, Khaled
al-Burai, 25, east of Jabaliya, in the north of Gaza, a medical source
said.
Two other Palestinians survived the attack, witnesses said.
Later, in the afternoon, Israeli air raids killed 42-year-old Ussama
Ali, and wounded 10 passers-by, according to Abham Abu Selmiya,
spokesperson for the emergency services.
Palestinian medics said he was riding a motorcycle in Gaza City's al-Nasser neighbourhood when he was hit.
Earlier in the day Hamas had threatened to end a three-day-old
Egyptian-brokered truce following a series of deadly Israeli air raids.
A statement on Saturday from the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades said
"the air raids by the Zionist enemy are new crimes. We will not stay
silent in the face of the crimes".
Israeli denial
A medic said Ali al-Shawaf, aged six, was killed, and his father and
another man wounded east of the city of Khan Younis, but the Israeli
military denied it was responsible.
"According to the findings of a preliminary investigation, what
happened in Khan Younis had nothing to do with any operation by the
Israeli military," an Israeli military spokeswoman said.
Witnesses said Israeli aircraft carried out at least four other raids elsewhere in Gaza on Saturday.
One targeted people believed by Israel to be fighters who were
travelling in a car in the Zeitoun neighbourhood east of Gaza City after
they had fired rockets into Israel, witnesses said.
Two civilian bystanders suffered minor injuries, they said.
Raids also struck the Beit Lahiya area in the north and the Nusseirat
and Al-Bureij refugee camps in the centre of the Gaza Strip, without
causing any casualties, witnesses said on Saturday.
Overnight raids targeted two camps of the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades
in the centre and north of Gaza, and a former Hamas security post in
Gaza City. They wounded about 20 people, the health ministry said.
Palestinian fighters struck back, firing at least 23 rockets into
southern Israel, most of them hitting the town of Sderot close to the
Gaza border, Israeli officials said, adding that one man was wounded.
The Israeli army said the latest raids were in response to rocket fire earlier in the week.
Israel held Hamas responsible for "all terrorist activity coming from the Gaza Strip", the army statement said.
The latest round of Israeli attacks and Palestinian retaliation began
with air raids on Monday morning, just hours after armed men from Sinai
carried out an ambush along Israel's southern border with Egypt,
killing an Israeli civilian.
Israel has said its sudden surge in Gaza operations was "in no way
related" to the border incident, with the military saying the air force
was targeting fighters about to attack it. |
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