More people die in Israel-Gaza attacks

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Israel's harshest assault on Gaza in 4 years, the attacks kill at least 6 while accounts on the violence unfold on Twitter

AIRSTRIKE AFTERMATH. Palestinian firefighters extinguish fire from the car of Ahmaed Jaabari, head of the military wing of the Hamas movement, the Ezzedin Qassam Brigades, after it was hit by an Israeli air strike in Gaza City on November 14, 2012. The top Hamas commander Ahmed al-Jaabari was killed in an Israeli air strike , medics and a Hamas source told. AFP PHOTO/MAHMUD HAMS

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories – Warplanes pounded Gaza for a second day Thursday, November 15, as 3 Israelis and 3 Palestinians were killed in fierce fighting which began with Israel’s targeted killing of a top Hamas chief.

Israel’s harshest assault on the Palestinian territory in 4 years, which comes as the Jewish state heads toward general elections, prompted an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council amid growing international concern.

Police said that since Israel’s targeted killing of Hamas military chief Ahmed Jaabari on Wednesday afternoon, November 14, militants have fired around 180 rockets over the border, one of which hit a house on Thursday morning, killing 3 Israelis and injuring another 4.

And the Israeli air force has pounded Gaza with more than 100 air strikes, killing 11 and injuring at least 115, medics and Hamas officials said.

“We have 3 killed,” Israeli police spokeswoman Luba Samri told AFP, saying 4 other people were also injured in a “direct hit on a house” in Kiryat Malachi, a town which lies 30 kilometers northeast of the Gaza Strip.

Major cities hit

The attack on Kiryat Malachi was claimed by Hamas’s armed wing, the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades in a statement on its website.

Israeli police said they had raised the level of alert across the entire country in order to deal with “the possibility of terror attacks” in response to Israel’s killing of the Hamas chief.

“All the major cities in southern Israel were hit, and the majority of the more serious damage was in Beersheva,” police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld told AFP.

Schools within a 40-kilometer area of Gaza were closed, and those living within 7 kilometers of the strip had been told not to go to work, he said. “It’s a pretty serious situation.”

An AFP correspondent close to the Gaza border saw several Israeli jets flying south as well as convoys of military jeeps and at least two flatbed trucks carrying armoured bulldozers.

In Gaza, Palestinian medics said 3 Hamas militants were killed in an early strike near the southern city of Khan Yunis, raising to 11 the number of Palestinians killed since the hit on Jaabari at around 1400 GMT on Wednesday, November 13.

“11 people have been killed and 115 people injured,” he told AFP.

Throughout the morning, further air strikes hit northern Gaza, Gaza City and east of Khan Yunis, injuring another 3, medics and security sources told AFP.

Among the dead were 5 Hamas militants, two children, a woman and an elderly man, he said. The identities of the other two were not immediately clear.

Furious response

The violence sparked a furious response from Egypt’s Islamist administration, which has close ties with Gaza’s ruling Hamas movement, with Cairo recalling its ambassador in protest at the Israeli operation.

Israel has said the strikes were only “the beginning” of an offensive targeting Gaza militants and warned it may expand its activity, with the army saying if necessary it was “ready to initiate a ground operation.”

“If it becomes necessary, we are prepared to expand the operation,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned on Wednesday evening, several hours after the start of Operation Pillar of Defense.

Defense Minister Ehud Barak said the operation was to strengthen Israel’s deterrence, damage militant groups’ rocket-firing capabilities and stamp out attacks on Israel.

Jaabari’s death sparked fury in Gaza, with Hamas’s armed wing warning saying that by killing its leader Israel had “opened the gates of hell on itself.”

And Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhum said the strike was tantamount to a “declaration of war.”

In New York, the UN Security Council held an emergency 90-minute session to discuss the crisis, with Arab states pushing for a strong condemnation, but the US envoy strongly defending Israel’s right to self-defense in the face of Palestinian rocket fire.

Amid fears of a regional flareup over the confrontation, US President Barack Obama and UN chief Ban Ki-moon both phoned Netanyahu and Morsi in a bid to de-escalate the conflict.

Britain urged restraint and Russia said it was “very concerned.”

The air strikes capped 5 days of rising tension in and around Gaza, which saw Israel kill seven Palestinians and militants fire more than 120 rockets over the border, injuring 8.

‘Most heartbreaking’

Updates on the violence have also unfolded on Twitter, with locals expressing fear through the social network site. The Israel Defense Force (IDF) on Thursday began livetweeting the attack on Hamas, which the IDF called “an Iranian proxy responsible for terror attacks on Israel.”

In a series of tweets, Twitter user Samayya (@mayyasa1) said she received “the most heartbreaking message” from a friend in Gaza.

“Israel just announced it’s going to cut all the communication means on Gaza, which means no Internet, no cell, or any other way to connect to the outside world. If that happened it means they have started a massacre and we don’t know if we will survive this,” Samayya’s friend said.

“In case this happens, I need you to tell the whole world about it. We need you to be our voice (in) the outside world,” she added, quoting her friend. 

Meanwhile, the hacking collective Anonymous has jumped in for tips on skirting the Internet cut-off in Gaza. – Rappler.com, with reports from Agence France-Presse

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