by Agency Reporter
Israel
withdrew ground forces from the Gaza Strip on Tuesday and started a
72-hour ceasefire with Hamas mediated by Egypt as a first step towards
negotiations on a more enduring end to the month-old war, Reuters reports.
Minutes before the truce began at 8 am
(0500 GMT), Hamas launched a salvo of rockets, calling them revenge for
Israel’s “massacres”. Israel’s anti-missile system shot down one rocket
over Jerusalem, police said. Another hit a house in a town near
Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank. There were no casualties.
Israeli armour and infantry left Gaza
ahead of the truce, with a military spokesman saying their main goal of
destroying cross-border infiltration tunnels dug by Islamist militants
had been completed. “Mission accomplished,” the military tweeted.
Troops and tanks will be “redeployed in
defensive positions outside the Gaza Strip and we will maintain those
defensive positions”, spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Peter Lerner said,
reflecting Israeli readiness to resume fighting if attacked.
Sami Abu Zuhri, a spokesman for the
Islamist Hamas faction that rules Gaza, said Israel’s offensive in the
densely populated, coastal enclave was a “100 per cent failure”.
Israel sent officials to join talks in
Cairo to cement a longer-term deal during the course of the truce. Hamas
and Islamic Jihad also dispatched representatives from Gaza.
In Gaza, where some half-million people
have been displaced by a month of bloodshed, some residents, carrying
mattresses and with children in tow, left UN shelters to trek back to
neighbourhoods where whole blocks have been destroyed by Israeli
shelling and the smell of decomposing bodies fills the air.
Sitting on a pile of debris on the edge
of the northern town of Beit Lahiya, Zuhair Hjaila, a 33-year-old father
of four, said he had lost his house and his supermarket.
“This is complete destruction,” he said. “I never thought I would come back to find an earthquake zone.”
Visiting International Red Cross
President Peter Maurer, responding to local criticism that his
organisation was late in helping some of the victims, said “we were
insufficiently able to bridge the gap between our willingness to protect
them and our ability to do so”.
Several previous truce attempts by Egypt
and other regional powers, overseen by the United States and United
Nations, failed to calm the worst Israeli-Palestinian fighting in two
years.
An Israeli official said that in the
hour before the ceasefire came into effect, the civilian airspace over
Tel Aviv was closed as a precaution against Gaza rockets, and takeoffs
and landings were delayed at Ben-Gurion Airport.
Gaza officials say the war has killed
1,867 Palestinians, most of them civilians. Israel says 64 of its
soldiers and three civilians have been killed since fighting began on
July 8, after a surge in Palestinian rocket launches.
Hamas said it had informed Egypt “of its acceptance of a 72-hour period of calm”, beginning on Tuesday.
The Palestinian cabinet issued a statement after its weekly meeting in Ramallah welcoming the ceasefire.
The US State Department also welcomed
the truce and urged the parties to “respect it completely”. Spokeswoman
Jen Psaki said Washington would continue its efforts to help the sides
achieve a “durable, sustainable solution for the long term”.
Efforts to turn the ceasefire into a
lasting truce could prove difficult, with the sides far apart on their
central demands, and each rejecting the other’s legitimacy. Hamas
rejects Israel’s existence, and vows to destroy it, while Israel
denounces Hamas as a terrorist group and eschews any ties.
Besides the truce, Palestinians demand
an end to the Israeli-Egyptian blockade on impoverished Gaza and the
release of prisoners including those Israel arrested in a June crackdown
in the occupied West Bank after three Jewish seminary students were
kidnapped and killed.
Israel has resisted those demands in the past.
Palestinian Foreign Minister Riad
al-Malki said there was “clear evidence” of war crimes by Israel during
its offensive in Gaza as he met International Criminal Court prosecutors
in The Hague on Tuesday to push for an investigation.
Both sides have traded allegations of
war crimes during the Gaza assault, while defending their own actions as
consistent with international law.
Lerner said the army overnight destroyed
the last of 32 tunnels located inside Gaza and which had been dug by
Hamas for cross-border ambushes at an estimated cost of $100 million.
Israeli officials say, however, that
some tunnels may have gone undetected and that the armed forces are
poised to strike at these in the future.
No comments:
Post a Comment