Israel ignores UN resolution
ISRAEL: Israel pushed ahead with its offensive in the Gaza
Strip yesterday, ignoring a U.N. Security Council resolution calling for
an immediate ceasefire to the 14-day-old conflict.
Israeli warplanes dropped bombs on the outskirts of the city of Gaza,
residents said. Elsewhere, Palestinian medics said tanks shelled a house
in Beit Lahiya in the north of the Gaza Strip, killing six Palestinians
from the same family.
In New York, the Security Council passed a resolution urging an
“immediate, durable and fully respected ceasefire”, and for Israel to
withdraw from Gaza after its two-week air-and-ground offensive. The
United States abstained.
There was no immediate reaction from Israeli officials to the vote,
but Israel opposed the idea of a binding resolution. Israel’s military
commanders appeared keen to pursue the ground offensive to try to secure
more gains.
For its part, Gaza’s Hamas rulers did not recognise the resolution as
it had not been consulted on it, said a spokesman for the Islamist
group.
The resolution, pressed for by Arab countries in the face of efforts
by Britain, France and the United States for a more muted statement,
called for arrangements to prevent arms smuggling into Gaza and for its
borders to be opened.
It said there should be “unimpeded provision” and distribution of aid
to the territory, home to 1.5 million people, many of whom are dependent
on food assistance.
The U.N. Relief and Works Agency, which distributes the vast majority
of aid in Gaza, kept its operations suspended on Friday after the death
of one of its drivers in Israel’s offensive. It was not clear when aid
distribution would resume.
On Thursday, ambulance workers ventured onto the battlefield to
gather decomposing bodies from the rubble. Hamas officials said the
Palestinian death toll had risen to 773, of whom more than a third were
children.
While the United States abstained from the U.N. resolution, Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice said Washington backed the text and had
abstained only because it wanted to see the results of an Egyptian
mediation effort.
“The United States thought it important to see the outcome of the
Egyptian mediation efforts in order to see what this resolution might
have been supporting,” she said.
In Gaza, local ambulance crews and the Red Crescent, using a time
slot coordinated with Israeli forces, said they collected rotting
corpses in places that had been too risky to reach since Israeli forces
began their ground attack six days ago.
They found four children starving beside the bodies of their mothers
and evacuated scores of trapped and wounded, the International Committee
of the Red Cross (ICRC) said.
Israel lost three soldiers in combat with militants. Apart from a
“friendly fire” incident which killed four, it was its heaviest one-day
combat toll.
European governments offered to back the plan with an EU border force
to stop Hamas rearming via tunnels from Egypt. The deal would also
address Palestinian calls for an end to Israel’s economic blockade of
the Gaza Strip.
The ICRC accused Israel of violating the rules of war by delaying
ambulance access to the house where its team found children huddled
beside corpses, not far from the Israeli army.
The Red Cross said the army must have known of the situation but did
not help the wounded, in violation of international law.
GAZA, Friday, Reuters
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