Los Angeles Times

As truce ends, hostilitie­s resume in the Gaza Strip

Rockets and mortar rounds are fired at Israel, which hits back, killing at least five.

- By Laura King and Batsheva Sobelman laura.king@latimes.com King is a Times staff writer. Sobelman is a special correspond­ent. Special correspond­ent Maher Abukhater in Ramallah, West Bank, contribute­d to this report.

JERUSALEM — Renewed fighting broke out Friday between Israel and Palestinia­n militants in the Gaza Strip after a three-day cease-fire expired, as mediator Egypt and the United Nations urged the two sides to resume indirect talks.

The day began with rocket and mortar fire from Gaza even before the truce formally ended. Hours later, Israel hit what it called “terror” targets in the coastal enclave, killing at least five people, including three children, Palestinia­n officials said.

On both sides of the frontier, war-weary civilians again sought havens from the fighting. Many Palestinia­ns went back to U.N.-designated shelters, leaving homes they had tried to re- claim during the truce, while some Israelis who had returned to homes lying close to Gaza again sought safety in the country’s north.

Egypt has been brokering talks aimed at achieving an extended cease-fire and laying the groundwork for a broader accord. A contentiou­s all-night session not only failed to bolster the temporary truce, but laid bare the deep difference­s between the two sides’ positions.

Internatio­nal pressure for an end to the monthlong battle has been growing. Through a spokesman, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Kimoon urged the parties to refrain from further fighting and take all necessary steps to reach a “durable” ceasefire.

Egypt is not only trying to mediate the dispute, it is a party to it. Hamas, the militant group in charge of Gaza, has demanded a lifting of the seven-year blockade of the territory imposed by Israel and Egypt, but the Cairo government wants Hamas to give up its weapons and not be allowed to obtain more. Israel, for its part, said it would not negotiate under fire.

Israel’s delegation left Egypt early Friday, but the Palestinia­n negotiator­s set more meetings with Egyptian mediators. The latest deadlock, and renewed fighting, followed what had been the longest lull in hostilitie­s since the start of the conflict on July 8.

The three-day pause had been punctuated by bellicose rhetoric from Hamas, and by warnings from Israel that it would hit back hard if attacked.

“The renewed rocket attacks by terrorists at Israel are unacceptab­le, intolerabl­e and shortsight­ed,” army spokesman Lt. Col. Peter Lerner said after Israel resumed its strikes. He blamed “Hamas’ bad decision to breach the ceasefire.”

Hamas and its allies have fired more than 3,300 rockets and missiles into Israel during the last month, and Israel has raked the seaside strip with airstrikes and artillery fire aimed at destroying rocket launchers and infiltrati­on tunnels.

Israel had said previously it would have no objection to continuing an unconditio­nal cease-fire while indirect talks in the Egyptian capital continued. But Hamas refused to extend the truce before it achieves political concession­s from Israel.

Israel launched its aerial campaign against militants in Gaza after weeks of rocket fire and launched a ground incursion into the narrow coastal strip on July 17.

During four weeks of fighting, about 1,900 Palestinia­ns have died — a large majority of them civilians, according to the United Nations — and 64 Israeli soldiers and three civilians were killed.

Israel unilateral­ly withdrew its ground forces just before the three-day truce took effect Tuesday morning, but its troops remained deployed outside the border fence.

 ?? Mahmud Hams AFP/Getty Images ?? SMOKE RISES above Gaza City after renewed Israeli airstrikes. Gazans and Israelis living nearby returned to safe havens as the three-day cease-fire expired. Indirect talks in Cairo have yielded little progress.
Mahmud Hams AFP/Getty Images SMOKE RISES above Gaza City after renewed Israeli airstrikes. Gazans and Israelis living nearby returned to safe havens as the three-day cease-fire expired. Indirect talks in Cairo have yielded little progress.

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