Arabs slam Israel over Gaza
EGYPT: Arab foreign ministers roundly denounced Israel's
campaign in Gaza at an emergency meeting in Cairo Saturday, as Egypt tried to
mediate a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. The Arab ministers decided that
Arab League chief Nabil al-Arabi would head a delegation to Gaza in a show of
solidarity, and to review the “usefulness” of their past diplomacy towards
Israel.
The session came amid a flurry of meetings to coordinate an
Arab and Turkish response to the four-day conflict, in which 45 Palestinians have
been killed in air strikes and three Israelis have died in Hamas rocket
attacks.
At a press conference with Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip
Erdogan in Cairo, Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi said his government was in
“vigorous” talks with Palestinians and Israel to bring an end to the fighting.
“There are some indications that there could be a ceasefire
soon,” he said, though he added that there were still “no guarantees.” Hamas
chief Khaled Meshaal was also in Cairo to meet Egypt's intelligence chief --
traditionally the point man in mediating truces with Israel -- and the visiting
Qatari Emir Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani.
A senior Hamas official told AFP the movement was reluctant
to agree a truce because it does not believe mediators could guarantee the
terms of a ceasefire. The “international community” had to put pressure on
Israel, he said.
Israeli raids kill children
GAZA CITY: Israeli raids killed three children and
critically wounded two more in Gaza early Sunday even as the army said there had
been no rocket fire all night amid growing talk of a truce.
Aircraft also hit two media centres in Gaza City, wounding
at least eight journalists, including one who lost his leg, emergency services
said, as Egypt and France pressed efforts to broker a ceasefire and prevent an
all-out ground war like that of 2008-9.
A senior Palestinian official in Gaza told AFP that amid
serious efforts to end the violence, a deal could be reached later on Sunday or
on Monday.
“There are serious talks to reach a truce, and it is
possible that understandings will be reached today or tomorrow,” the official
said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
With France's top diplomat Laurent Fabius en route to the
region to join the truce efforts, an Israeli air strike in central Gaza killed
an 18-month-old boy and critically wounded his two young brothers, hours after
warplanes killed two more children in the north.
The latest deaths took the overall toll in Gaza to 49 from
Israeli strikes since Wednesday with more than 450 people injured, the
emergency services said. Nine of the dead have been children.
Two Gaza media buildings bombed
GAZA CITY: Israeli war planes targeted two media buildings
in Gaza City on Sunday morning, injuring at least eight journalists, including
one who lost his leg, medical officials said.
Separately, Israeli air strikes continued in other parts of
Gaza, including the north, where two children were killed in raids on homes.
As the strikes continued, the Israeli army said there had
been no rockets fired into the Jewish state since 9:00 pm on Saturday evening,
although around 7:30 am there were reports of alert sirens in the south of the
country.
And Hamas prime minister Ismail Haniya's office said he had
spoken by phone with Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi to discuss the ongoing
violence.
The first Israeli strike on a media building came around
2:00 am local time.
“At least six journalists were wounded, with minor and moderate
injuries, when Israeli warplanes hit the al-Quds TV office in the Showa and
Housari building in the Rimal neighbourhood of Gaza City,” health ministry
spokesman Ashraf al-Qudra said.
The injured were taken to Gaza City's Shifa hospital. One
journalist lost his leg in the attack, Qudra said.
A second hit on a different, nearby media building came
around 7:00 am (0500 GMT).
S. American bloc condemns violence
BRAZIL: A major South American trading bloc condemned
Saturday the “disproportionate use of force” in Gaza, calling on Israel and the
Palestinians to immediately halt the violence that has claimed more than 40
lives.
MERCOSUR leaders expressed “their strongest condemnation of
the violence taking place in Israel and Palestine,” said a statement released
by Brazil, which currently holds the group's rotating presidency.
They “profoundly lament the lost of human lives and express
their concern over the disproportionate use of force,” it added.
The statement also expressed support for the Palestinians'
controversial bid to secure upgraded membership at the United Nations later
this month, a move strongly opposed by Israel and the United States.
Hackers down hundreds of Israeli sites
ISRAEL: Online activist group Anonymous said on Saturday it
had downed the websites of dozens of Israeli state agencies and a top bank in
protest over the Jewish state's deadly air assault on Gaza.
The hackers said their operation “OpIsrael” had either
damaged or completely erased the sites of more than 650 private and public
institutions that included the Bank of Jerusalem -- one of the country's main
finance houses.
“Bank of Jerusalem database has been deleted,” the group
said in a tweet next to a link to the lender's non-functioning website.
It also claimed to have briefly downed the foreign ministry
website in protest over an alleged Israeli threat to cut the Gaza Strip's
Internet communications.
“For far too long, Anonymous has stood by with the rest of
the world and watched in despair the barbaric, brutal and despicable treatment
of the Palestinian people in the so called 'Occupied Territories' by the Israel
Defence Force,” Anonymous said in a statement.
“But when the government of Israel publicly threatened to
sever all Internet and other telecommunications into and out of Gaza they
crossed a line in the sand.”
The group threatened Israel with the “unbridled wrath of
Anonymous” if it went ahead with the Internet cable cut.
Israel's foreign ministry was not immediately available for
comment on the threat, and no reference to the hack attack was made in official
government statements on Saturday.
Meanwhile, Israeli defence officials have used Twitter to
provide real-time warnings about incoming rockets and also make direct threats
against Hamas.
AFP
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