Israel waits on ground assault; death toll in Gaza is 111
Israel's
cabinet met late on Monday night to discuss the latest ceasefire
initiatives with Hamas, on the bloodiest day yet of the military
offensive when over 30 Palestinians were killed in multiple strikes.
As
UN chief Ban Ki-moon stepped into the Egypt-led efforts to strike a
ceasefire, the Security Council wrangled over an Arab-proposed statement
calling for Israel-Hamas hostilities to end, with Russia expressing
frustration over the silence on the issue and blaming the US for
blocking any action.
Early Tuesday
morning, at least four people were injured when F-16 fighter jets hit
the Islamic National Bank in Gaza City, which is located in a
residential area, Al Jazeera reported.
At a late night
cabinet meeting, the Israeli government agreed to briefly hold off
sending ground forces into Gaza to see how the ceasefire efforts in
Cairo turn out, according to Jerusalem Post.
This makes
Tuesday’s round of talks in Cairo very crucial to the situation and if a
tangible solution is not arrived at by the end of the day, Israel would
then decide on a ground assault.
While several
Western nations have supported Israel's military offensive and its
"right to defense", they have warned against launching a ground invasion
of Gaza enclave.
Khaled Meshaal, leader of Hamas, the controlling authority of Gaza, said Hamas was aware that Israel
is "capable" of an invasion, but warned Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu that such a move would not "be a picnic, but a political
disaster".
Speaking at a press
conference in Cairo on Monday, Meshaal said Hamas was willing for a
truce but the Israeli aggression and the continued economic blockade of
Gaza should end.
"Whoever started the war must end it," he said, insisting that Hamas would not yield to Israeli conditions on a ceasefire.
UN
Secretary-General Ban, who arrived in Cairo on Monday for talks, will
travel to Jerusalem on Tuesday to lend his weight to calls for a
de-escalation of hostilities.
On a diplomatic tour of Asia, US
President Barack Obama called Netanyahu and Egyptian President Mohammad
Mursi to discuss ways to halt the violence while Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton spoke to foreign ministers of France, Qatar and Turkey.
In Gaza,
meanwhile, Israeli raids continued for a seventh day on Tuesday, and
medics said the death toll had reached to 111 in the narrow coastal
territory, according to Al Jazeera.
Israel
President Shimon Peres meanwhile accused Iran of encouraging the
Palestinians to continue rocket attacks on Israel rather than
negotiating a ceasefire even as he praised Egyptian President Mohammad
Mursi's role in the crisis.
"They are out of their mind," he said of the Iranians.
On Monday, Israeli attacks flattened Gaza's police headquarters and targeted a building housing media offices for a second time.
The building houses
Palestinian and international media outlets, including Britain's Sky
News, Saudi-owned Al Arabiya and the official Hamas broadcaster, Al Aqsa
TV.
The
Islamic Jihad group said one of its commanders was killed in the
attack. In a similar attack on Sunday eight journalists were injured
including one who had a leg amputated.
However, Israeli
government spokesperson, Mark Regev said Israel was not targeting
journalists but "Hamas communications equipment".
"Hamas
used communication facilities on buildings where journalists were," he
said, describing Al Aqsa TV as a "Hamas command and control facility".
The US
meanwhile dispatched three warships to the region to be on standby, if
needed for the purpose of evacuation of Americans in the region.
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