HUMANITARIAN WINDOW TURNS BLOODY....!
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Israel authorized a four-hour "humanitarian window" Wednesday in
Gaza, but it lasted nowhere near that long.
Militants continued to fire rockets
from Gaza into Israel during the announced time frame, and Israel responded
with airstrikes.
In making the offer earlier in the day,
Israel said the window would not apply to areas in which Israeli soldiers were
already operating, and Israel would "respond to any attempt to exploit
this window to harm" civilians or troops. It also told residents to stay
away from areas they've been asked to evacuate.
Fighting raged in many areas of Gaza,
with Israel reporting militants hit, soldiers wounded, and 40 "terror
activity sites" struck.
Hamas TV said many people were killed
in shelling near a street market in northern Gaza. The Gaza Health Ministry
reported 17 killed.
More than 1,300 Palestinians have been
killed since the conflict between Israel and Hamas began this month, the
Palestinian Ministry of Health in Gaza said.
The number of militants killed is
unclear, but the United Nations estimates that 70% to 80% of the dead are
civilians.
On the Israeli side, 53 soldiers have
died since Operation Protective Edge began July 8, according to the Israel
Defense Forces. Three civilians have also been killed in Israel.
U.N. facility struck
The United Nations condemned Israel for
attacking a school Wednesday that was being used as a shelter for 3,000
Palestinians.
U.N. spokesman Chris Gunness said his
group's initial assessment indicates Israeli artillery hit the school. The
number of deaths was not immediately clear, Gunness said. The Palestinian
Health Ministry said 20 were killed.
But Israel said a group of militants
fired at Israeli soldiers from the vicinity, and the soldiers "responded
by firing at the origin of the fire," a military spokesman said.
"If our forces were involved in a
firefight, it's because Hamas has decided that it's open season on the
U.N.," Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev told CNN Wednesday.
Israel has said a Hamas misfire was
responsible for a previous attack on a U.N. facility.
"More than 200 rockets fired from
Gaza have hit Gaza since July 8. Palestinian terrorists fire from civilian
areas and hit their own people," the IDF said on Twitter, along with
videos that the military said show Hamas fighters launching attacks from inside
homes, mosques, hospitals and schools.
Rockets have been found inside U.N.
facilities in Gaza. The latest such discovery was Tuesday, the United Nations
said.
"We condemn the group or groups
who endangered civilians by placing these munitions in our school,"
Gunness said.
After the school was struck Wednesday,
Gunness said, "We have moved beyond the humanitarian realm. We are
overwhelmed. ... There are tens of thousands of people in the streets in Gaza
without food, without water, without shelter. That's why we call on the international
community to take deliberate political action to end this ongoing
carnage."
More than 200,000 Palestinians are
packing into 85 shelters across Gaza, Gunness said Wednesday, calling the
situation a "human displacement crisis."
U.N. official: 'The world stands
disgraced'
Pierre Krahenbuhl, head of the U.N.
agency for Palestinians, insisted the school was hit by Israeli shelling.
"Children killed in their sleep;
this is an affront to all of us, a source of universal shame," Krahenbuhl
said in a statement. "Today the world stands disgraced."
A strike Tuesday severely damaged
Gaza's only power plant. Israel said it did not target the plant, and that a
Hamas rocket may have been to blame.
Either way, residents must depend
almost entirely on small generators for electricity. Clean water is
inaccessible for most. And some 3,600 people have lost their homes.
"We cannot
supply electricity" for hospitals, sewage treatment or domestic use, said
Fathi al-Sheikh Khalil, deputy chairman of the Palestinian Energy Natural
Resources Authority in Gaza. "This is a disaster."
Nations pull ambassadors
Chile, Peru, Brazil and Ecuador have
pulled their ambassadors out of Tel Aviv to protest the Israeli offensive.
Regev called that
"incomprehensible." Israel is democratic, peaceful, and "acting
to protect its citizens," he said.
"On the other side you have a
brutal terrorist organization, Hamas, which is committed to the destruction of
Israel; that says every Israeli civilian is a legitimate target in its war of
terror, that says the only solution to the conflict is the elimination of my
country, violent jihad. And they are shooting rockets at the Israeli civilian
population. And at the same time they are adopting tactics, turning Gaza
citizens into human shields, deliberately endangering them."
Polls: Israelis don't want cease-fire,
Palestinians don't want two-state solution
While the vast majority of casualties
are Palestinians in Gaza, Israel continues to ward off rocket attacks from Gaza
with its Iron Dome missile
defense system. Israeli officials say they are committed to destroying tunnels
used by Palestinian militants in Gaza to make their way into Israel.
A poll released this week showed 86.5%
of Jewish Israelis surveyed say Israel cannot accept a cease-fire because
"Hamas continues firing missiles on Israel, not all the tunnels have been
found, and Hamas has not surrendered," according to the Jerusalem Post.
It's unclear how many in Gaza want
militants to stop rocket attacks.
Last month, a poll by the
Washington Institute for Near East policy found most Palestinians in Gaza
oppose a two-state solution and want to work toward a five-year goal of
abolishing Israel. But the majority said they support nonviolent methods of
"popular resistance."
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