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No sign of ceasefire in Gaza

20072014

373 Palestinians, 7 Israelis killed; no sign of ceasefire

Amid intense efforts by world leaders to broker a ceasefire, Israel on Sunday expanded its ground offensive in the Gaza Strip after the death of its four soldiers, while the Palestinian militant groups used suicide bombers and bomb laden donkey carts to attack Israeli troops.
Some 373 Palestinians, including children and women, have been killed in the Israeli offensive, over 2,500 injured and almost 61,000 displaced seeking refuge in 49 UN Relief and Works Agency run centres, sources in the Gaza Strip said.
At least 24 Palestinians were killed today, including the son of a senior Hamas leader.
There were reports of multiple deaths in Israeli attacks on Shejaiya and the neighbouring Zeitun district, as well as in Jabaliya to the north.
The streets of Shejaiya were filled with thousands of people fleeing for their lives.
Seven Israelis, including five soldiers, have been killed in the fighting and dozens others injured while a large section of the Israeli population struggles to carry out normal life under attack, trying to stay put close to safe shelters under instructions from the Home Front.
Four soldiers were killed yesterday, including two who died when militants disguised in military uniforms emerged from a tunnel shaft and opened fire at them inside Israel.
One of the militants was also killed on Israeli soil, and the rest fled back to Gaza and were killed by a helicopter gunship, Channel 10 said.
Amid raging violence, Qatar will today host a meeting between Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and UN chief Ban Ki-moon in attempts to reach a ceasefire agreement.
Abbas will also meet exiled Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal following his meeting with the UN chief, reports said.
The meetings come after French-led efforts to reach a ceasefire failed and Hamasrejected an Egyptian proposal.
The meeting in Doha will be headed by Qatar’s emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, who has been acting as a “channel of communication” between Hamas and the international community, local media reports said.
Islamist Hamas’ fighters infiltrated nearby parts of Israel via underground tunnels and clashed with Israeli troops yesterday.
The clashes demonstrated how Israel’s conflict with Hamas has now spilled outside, and even underneath.
“Controlling tunnel shafts doesn’t give us full control of the entire tunnel,” security sources said, adding troops have been focussing on destroying the tunnel network which have emerged as a major threat with some finding their way inside Israeli territory.
“The increased presence in Gaza is aimed at destroying Hamas infrastructure”, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) said.
“In preparation for the mission, the forces have undergone an intensified training and thorough planning period and are prepared and stand ready for the task at hand,” IDF spokesman Lt.Col. Peter Lerner said in a statement.
Sixty-two people in Gaza had been killed yesterday, the highest daily death toll so far, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.
As midnight approached, a major battle flared in the east of Gaza City, where the horizon along the border was dominated with flashes, explosions and columns of smoke.
“We know that Hamas terrorists are operating underground, and that’s where we will meet them,” the IDF said, adding that it found 13 tunnels across Gaza, with 34 access points.
In one of the foiled infiltrations, a killed Hamas fighter was found with tranquilizers and cuffs, “carried with intention to abduct Israelis,” the Israeli military said.
Hamas and other militant factions in Gaza have claimed to have inflicted more casualties on the Israeli troops but their claims could not be confirmed yet from the IDF.
Civilian casualties in Gaza meanwhile have been on the rise with 70 per cent of the 373 killed being non-combatants, according to the United Nations amid claims by Israel that the militants are using civilian as “human shields”.
The Israeli military also encountered a suicide donkey, one loaded with explosives, approaching soldiers near Rafah. The troops fired on the animal, detonating the bombs and killing the donkey on Friday night.
The IDF claimed late yesterday that since its ground war began on Thursday, “at least 70 terrorists were killed, including 20 in the past 24 hours.
Thirteen more fighters were captured and brought to Israel for questioning”. In southeastern Israel, a rocket fired from Gaza crashed into Negev yesterday, killing an Israeli and wounding four others, a hospital spokesman said.
Two Israelis have been killed by apparent Hamas rockets in the past week’s warfare.
Warnings of rockets sounded yesterday over the Israeli cities of Ashkelon, Rishon Letzion, Rehovot and Beer Sheva.
Militants in Gaza have launched 1,770 rockets on Israel since the start of Operation Protective Edge on July 8, the IDF said.
The Israeli anti-missile defence system, Iron Dome, is said to have intercepted 360 of them.
The IDF has struck “2,300 terror targets” in Gaza. In its recently launched ground operations, the IDF targeted 95 rocket-launching sites and found 13 tunnels with a network of at least 34 shafts, it claimed.




Ukraine claims Russian crew shot down Malaysian plane 

20072014

Ukraine claims Russian crew shot down Malaysian plane
Ukraine claimed it has “compelling evidence” that Russian crew operated the missile system that downed a Malaysian jet with 298 people on board and accused Moscow of helping rebels in trying to destroy evidence.
As the blame game continued with Russia accusing the US and the West of pointing fingers at it to push their Ukraine agenda, a team of Malaysian investigators touched down in Kiev to try and get to the bottom of what happened to the Malaysia Airlines aircraft that was shot down Thursday, killing all those on board.
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said the US administration sought to pin the blame on separatists and Russia without waiting for the results of an investigation.
The Boeing 777 was flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur as it was downed between Krasni Luch in Luhansk region and Shakhtarsk in the neighbouring region of Donetsk.
It is believed that flight MH17 crashed after being hit by a surface-to-air missile fired from the rebel-held area.
Ukraine’s counter intelligence chief Vitaly Nada told a news conference: “We have compelling evidence that this terrorist act was committed with the help of the Russian Federation. We know clearly that the crew of this system were Russian citizens.”
He also asked Russia to give Ukraine the names and surnames of the crew so that Kiev could question them.
As calls for an independent investigation into the downing of the jet grew louder, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed for an international probe.
The two leaders, who spoke on the telephone, “agreed that an international, independent commission under the direction of ICAO (UN’s International Civil Aviation Organization) should quickly have access to the site of the accident… to shed light on the circumstances of the crash and move the victims,” a German government statement said. Kiev also accused Russia of helping pro-Moscow rebels of trying to destroy evidence in the downing of the aircraft.
“The Ukrainian government officially announces: terrorists with the support of Russia are trying to destroy proof of this international crime,” Ukraine’s government said in a statement.
It complained that “the terrorists” had taken 38 bodies to a morgue in the rebel-held city of Donetsk.
It said the rebels were also trying to transport the plane’s wreckage to Russia. Latest figures released by Malaysia Airlines show the plane was carrying 192 Dutch nationals (including one with dual US citizenship), 44 Malaysians (including 15 crew), 27 Australians, 12 Indonesians and 10 Britons (including one with dual South African citizenship, four Germans, four Belgians, three from the Philippines, and one each from Canada and New Zealand.
Meanwhile, Malaysia said its jet never strayed into restricted airspace and its flight path was considered a safe route.
“MH17′s flight path was a busy major airway, like a highway in the sky. It followed a route which was set out by the international aviation authorities, approved by Eurocontrol, and used by hundreds of other aircraft,” Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai said.
Liow said officials from Eurocontrol stated that two days before the incident, 75 different airlines had flown the same route.
“MH17 flew at an altitude that was set and deemed safe by local air traffic control, and it never strayed into restricted airspace,” the minister said, adding that “the flight and its operators followed the rules.”
But on the ground, the rules of war were broken, he asserted. “In an unacceptable act of aggression, it appears that MH17 was shot down; its passengers and crew killed by a missile,” he said.
The Transport Minister also confirmed reports that MH17 initially requested to fly at 35,000 feet but was ordered to fly at 33,000 feet by air traffic control operators due to “other traffic”and that the altitude was deemed safe.
Liow issued an impassioned plea for the MH17 disaster site in Ukraine to be protected from tampering, saying evidence was being compromised in what it called a “betrayal of the lives that were lost.”
“Malaysia is deeply concerned that the crash site has not been properly secured,” Liow said.
“The integrity of the site has been compromised, and there are indications that vital evidence has not been preserved in place,” he said.
Liow’s assertions came as the Ukrainian government and separatist groups agreed to create a safety zone around the site where Malaysia Airlines jet crashed. Ukraine Ambassador to Malaysia Ihor V Humenyyi told the Malaysian Bernama news agency that the Ukrainian authorities and the rebels — currently in control of the territory — had agreed that no combat action would be carried out in the area of 400 square kilometeres to enable investigations.
Prime Minister Najib Razak today said that Malaysia, as the owner of the downed Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, will ensure that the plane’s black boxes will not be under the control of any irrelevant quarters.
According to the international law, the owner of the plane has every right for the black boxes, he said.
“We must follow the international law and those who have no rights whatsoever cannot claim or take over control of the black boxes,” he told reporters after meeting with families of victims of the MH17 tragedy in Kuala Lumpur.
Najib also said the government was committed to doing its level best to bring home the remains of Malaysian nationals who perished in the crash.
“Right now, our team has arrived in Kiev and we are in the midst of making arrangements to enter the area of the scene in Eastern Ukraine. It is about 400 kilometres away (from Kiev), so there are several procedures that must be adhered to before they can get into the area,” Najib said.
He said the authorities were taking every step to ensure the safety of the international team moving into the area, especially the investigation team from Malaysia. “I am sure everything has been done to ensure the safety of the team,” he said.
Najib said he spoke to Russian President Vladimir Putin by phone late Friday to stress the need for an objective probe into the crash, amid concerns the site was vulnerable to tampering.
“I also told Putin that the site should not be tampered (with) before the team begins its investigation,” he was quoted as saying.
Najib’s step-grandmother was on board the ill-fated jet, the country’s defence minister confirmed.
Hishammuddin Hussein, a minister, said his step- grandmother was also among those killed.
Malaysia’s Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai was to arrive in Kiev soon, the Star daily said.
Meanwhile, Ukraine said, the world community, must put pressure on Russia to pull back its terrorists and allow Ukrainian and international experts to carry out their inquiry.
Ukraine’s government has the authority to investigate the crash, under international conventions, even though the incident took place in rebel territory.
On Thursday, the day the plane tore apart in the sky over Torez, the rebels granted passage to a smaller international team of 21 people from the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
But when the OSCE team arrived among the rubble, armed local militiamen greeted them with hostility and throttled their access to the site.
“There didn’t seem to be anyone really in control,” OSCE spokesman Michael Bociurkiw said. Armed men, apparently pro-Russia militants, loosely guarded the area but could not answer the monitors’ questions, he said.

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