Hours after Israel restarts its Gaza operation, a spokesman for Hamas says it agrees to a U.N.-mediated "humanitarian pause."
FULL STORY
- What's happening on ground?
- Hamas rejects truce extension
- Resident: 'Where do I live now?'
- Rights activist killed at protest
- What will end violence?
July 27, 2014 -- Updated 1137 GMT (1937 HKT)
Hours after Israel restarts its Gaza operation, a spokesman for Hamas says it agrees to a U.N.-mediated "humanitarian pause." FULL STORY
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HAMAS AGREES TO NEW CEASE-FIRE EXTENSION
Hamas agrees to daylong cease-fire after Israel resumes offensive
July 27, 2014 -- Updated 1043 GMT (1843 HKT)
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STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: Hamas agrees to 24-hour "humanitarian pause"
- Israel says aerial, naval and ground activity resume after "incessant rocket fire"
- Hamas: A cease-fire that doesn't include troop withdrawal is unacceptable
- More than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed since the conflict began
Just hours earlier, the
heavy thump of Israeli artillery echoed once again across parts of the
territory, and black plumes of smoke rose from eastern neighborhoods of
Gaza City.
"Following Hamas'
incessant rocket fire throughout the humanitarian window, which was
agreed upon for the welfare of the civilian population in Gaza, the IDF
will now resume its aerial, naval and ground activity in the Gaza
Strip," the Israeli Defense Forces said in a statement.
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Israeli Amb. blames Hamas for school hit
Middle East propaganda war
CNN crew turned back by gunfire in Gaza
The Israeli Security
Cabinet had agreed to a U.N. request late Saturday to extend a
cease-fire that started Saturday morning until midnight Sunday (5 p.m.
ET Sunday) -- on the condition that its military could keep dismantling
and destroying Hamas' tunnels, according to senior Israeli officials.
Hamas rejected that idea,
saying it won't tolerate Israeli troops in the territory. And militants
in Gaza fired mortars and rockets into Israel late Saturday and through
Sunday morning, killing an Israeli soldier, the IDF said.
But the militant group that is in control of the besieged Palestinian territory soon changed its stance.
The group agreed to a
24-hour U.N.-mediated "humanitarian pause" starting at 2 p.m. local time
(7 a.m. ET), a text message from Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said.
"In response to the
intervention by the United Nations and taking into account the
conditions of our people and the upcoming Eid holiday, an accordance has
been reached between Palestinian resistance groups to call a
humanitarian calm for 24 hours," Zuhri said.
Hamas rejects cease-fire extension
Israel launched its
ground incursion in Gaza 10 days ago with the stated aim of taking out
the threat posed by the tunnels, which run under the border and have
been used by militants to carry out attacks on Israeli soil.
The temporary truce in
the conflict -- which has killed more than 1,000 people, most of them
Palestinian civilians -- had enabled medical supplies to be brought into
Gaza, families to emerge from shelters and people to dig out the dead
from piles of rubble.
'I'm very, very worried'
Hamas said it wasn't willing to prolong the calm under the current circumstances.
"Any humanitarian
cease-fire that does not include the withdrawal of the occupation
soldiers from Gaza borders and allowing citizens to return to their
homes and evacuate casualties is unacceptable," Hamas spokesman Sami Abu
Zuhri said.
Militants in Gaza had
already resumed firing rockets and mortars into Israel on Saturday
evening. The original 12-hour cease-fire had begun at 8 a.m. Saturday (1
a.m. ET).
"Yet again Hamas is
cynically exploiting the residents of Gaza in order to use them as human
shields," a media adviser for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
said in a statement, pointing out that Hamas had rejected or breached
several previous cease-fires since the fighting began.
Palestinian officials have repeatedly expressed concern about the lengthening conflict in Gaza.
"I'm very, very
worried," said Saeb Erakat, a senior official in the Palestine
Liberation Organization. "We are witnessing the gradual reoccupation of
Gaza."
IDF spokesman Lt. Col
Peter Lerner told CNN on Sunday that Israeli forces believe they are
"about halfway through" their effort to get rid of the militant tunnels.
Death toll over 1,000
The IDF said Saturday
that many Gaza residents were returning to previously evacuated areas
despite repeated warnings, placing themselves at risk. It said
operations against the tunnel threat continued and defensive positions
were being maintained.
Palestinians found more
than 100 bodies in areas that have been too dangerous to enter in recent
days because of Israeli bombardment, Dr. Ashraf al-Qedra from the Gaza
Ministry of Health told CNN.
Nearly 1,050
Palestinians have been killed and about 6,000 wounded since the Israeli
operation against Hamas in Gaza started on July 8, al-Qedra said.
The Israeli operation started with airstrikes, and a ground incursion in Gaza followed on July 17.
Israel blamed Hamas for civilian casualties resulting from Israeli strikes.
"The IDF targets
terrorist centers, but if residents are inadvertently hit, it is Hamas
which is responsible given that it has -- again -- violated the
humanitarian truce that Israel acceded to," Netanyahu's media adviser
said.
The IDF said Sunday that
the soldier killed overnight brought to 43 the number of Israeli troops
killed in the Gaza operation. Two Israeli civilians have been killed.
Diplomatic push
U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry and other diplomats pushed for an extended truce In Paris on
Saturday. Kerry met with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu.
Kerry had spent most of
last week meeting officials in the Middle East to try to broker a more
lasting end to the fighting. But so far, his efforts have born little
fruit. He returned to the United States early Sunday.
"We owe to the people of
both Israel and Gaza our renewed effort to consolidate this pause in
fighting into a more sustainable ceasefire," U.N. Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon said Saturday in a statement, reiterating his call for seven-day
humanitarian cease-fire.
But Hamas officials reiterated their calls for a broader set of terms to be part of any truce.
"There won't been any
talks about extending the cease-fire as long as there aren't talks about
breaking the siege," said Israa Al-Mudalal of the Gaza Ministry of
Foreign Affairs -- referring to Israel's longstanding restrictions on
the movements of people and goods in and out of Gaza.
She accused Israel of
"escalating the situation" in the so-called buffer zone and of not
letting medical workers remove bodies in certain areas.
'Nothing is left'
A CNN team visiting the
hardest-hit areas in northern Gaza, where many of the newly-discovered
bodies were discovered, saw entire blocks of buildings that had been
reduced to rubble by the fighting.
"I wish this cease-fire
had never happened," one man in Beit Hanoun told CNN, "and I would have
never found out my home is destroyed."
Another woman in Beit Hanoun met a neighbor as she navigated her way through mounds of rubble and metal. "Did you see my home?"
"It's gone. Nothing is left," the neighbor responded.
Families across the small, impoverished territory took advantage of the cease-fire Saturday to stock up on provisions.
"There are more people
in the streets," said a mother of five in the Khan Younis area of
southern Gaza, who did not want to be named. "People who were afraid
before go out now out of necessity. People with sick kids go to the
hospital today. Buy Pampers today. Buy food today. I went to get bread
for my family today."
She added, "When my husband goes to the mosque to pray, I pray that he comes back."
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