San Diego Union-Tribune

AS TRUCE HOLDS, GAZA POWER PLANT RESTARTS

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With a cease-fire between Israel and Palestinia­n militants holding after nearly three days of violence, Gaza’s sole power plant resumed operations Monday and Israel began reopening crossings into the territory.

Israel also lifted security restrictio­ns on southern Israeli communitie­s after the Egyptian-mediated truce took effect late Sunday.

War-weary people in Gaza and Israel were left to pick up the pieces after another round of violence — the worst since an 11-day war between Israel and the territory’s militant Hamas rulers last year.

Since Friday, Israeli aircraft had pummeled targets in Gaza, while the Iranbacked Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad militant group fired hundreds of rockets at Israel.

Over three days of fighting, 46 Palestinia­ns were killed, including 16 children and four women, and 311 were wounded, the Palestinia­n Health Ministry said. Twelve of those killed were Islamic Jihad militants, one was from a smaller armed group, and two were Hamasaffil­iated policemen who were not taking part in the fighting, according to the armed factions.

Israel estimated a total of 47 Palestinia­ns were killed, including 14 killed by misfired Islamic Jihad rockets. It said that 20 fighters and seven civilians died in Israeli airstrikes and that it is still investigat­ing six deaths.

No Israelis were killed or seriously wounded in the fighting.

The violence had threatened to spiral into another all-out war but was contained because Hamas stayed on the sidelines, possibly because it fears Israeli reprisals and an unraveling of economic understand­ings with Israel.

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