Sunday Star-Times

No ceasefire for Kerry as war escalates

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PALESTINIA­NS IN the Gaza Strip poured into the streets yesterday to recover their dead and stock up on food supplies after a 12-hour humanitari­an truce agreed by Israel and Hamas took hold.

Women in Beit Hanoun wailed as medics pulled three dead relatives from a home hit overnight by an Israeli air strike. Near Khan Younis, 18 members of a family died from tank shelling shortly before the truce began, the Gaza Health Ministry said.

Gaza health officials said rescue workers had so far pulled out 40 bodies from under the rubble since the truce began.

Israel’s military pledged to hold fire for 12 hours from yesterday afternoon but would press on searching for tunnels used by militants. The Islamist group Hamas, which dominates Gaza, said all Palestinia­n factions would abide by the brief truce.

US Secretary of State John Kerry has been spearheadi­ng internatio­nal efforts to end 19 days of conflict in which 940 Palestinia­ns, many of them civilians, have been killed. The diplomatic push was to continue today in Paris.

Israel said two more of its soldiers were killed in pre- truce fighting Gaza, bringing the army death toll to 37 as troops battled militants in this tiny Mediterran­ean enclave that is home to 1.8 million Palestinia­ns. Three Israeli citizens have also been killed by rockets fired from Gaza.

Residents of Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza strip walked through destroyed streets lined with damaged houses and entire buildings reduced to rubble. Some who had not seen each other for days embraced as they surveyed the wreckage around them.

‘‘ We lived through a night of horror. The shelling was all around our house,’’ said Hanan al-Zaanin, standing with four of her children outside their home Hanoun, an area which fierce fighting.

Many of Beit Hanoun’s 30,000 residents had fled the area. ‘‘We hope the calm lasts and they find a solution so fighting ends. We are afraid for our children’s safety,’’ she said, adding she will not leave her home. ‘‘There is no place to go.’’ Israeli tanks stood by as people searched through the debris for their belongings, packing whatever they could, blankets, furniture and clothes into taxis, trucks, rickshaws, and donkey carts before fleeing the town.

Fighting continued until the truce took hold. Militants fired a barrage of rockets out of Gaza, triggering sirens across much of southern and central Israel. No injuries were reported and the Iron Dome intercepto­r system shot down some missiles.

Minutes after the truce began, many Gaza residents rushed out of their homes and lined up outside banks to withdraw cash so they could stock up on supplies.

Diplomats in Paris will pursue efforts to secure a ceasefire, with France hosting officials from the United States, Britain, Germany, Italy, the European Union, Turkey and Qatar, a French diplomatic source said.

Kerry met yesterday with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu in Paris, officials said, to continue crafting a ceasefire proposal. Israel, which began its offensive on July 8, rejected internatio­nal proposals for an extended ceasefire, a government source said. But Kerry said in Cairo that no formal proposals had yet been put forward.

He said there were still disagreeme­nts on the terminolog­y, but he was confident there was a framework that would ultimately succeed and that ‘‘serious progress’’ had been made. in has Beit seen

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