The Citizen (Gauteng)

Militants announce ceasefire

GAZA: ISRAEL’S HARDLINE DEFENCE MINISTER DOES NOT SUPPORT STOPP0ING OF AIR STRIKES

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Gaza City

Palestinia­n militant groups in the Gaza Strip yesterday announced an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire with Israel after a severe escalation of violence threatened to descend into fullblown war.

The groups, including Hamas, issued a joint statement saying they would abide by the ceasefire as long as Israel did the same.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office and the military had not commented on the announceme­nt.

However, Israel’s hardline defence minister Avigdor Lieberman said in a statement he did not support stopping the strikes.

“Egypt’s efforts have been able to achieve a ceasefire between the resistance and the Zionist enemy,” the statement by the Gaza groups said. “The resistance will respect this declaratio­n as long as the Zionist enemy respects it.”

Kuwait and Bolivia meanwhile requested an urgent closed-door meeting late last night of the UN Security Council to discuss the violence, diplomats said.

The violent escalation between Israel and Palestinia­n militants in Gaza was the worst since a 2014 war.

Seven Palestinia­ns were killed in Gaza over the course of some 24 hours as Israeli strikes targeted militants and flattened buildings while sending fireballs and plumes of smoke into the sky.

Sirens wailed in southern Israel and tens of thousands of residents had taken cover in shelters as around 460 rockets and mortar rounds were fired from the Gaza Strip, wounding 27 people, including three severely.

A Palestinia­n labourer from the occupied West Bank was killed when a rocket hit a building in the Israeli city of Ashkelon.

Schools were closed in the Gaza Strip and in southern Israel as both sides warned the other that it would respond forcefully to any further violence.

Egypt has negotiated ceasefires following previous flare-ups, while UN Middle East envoy Nickolay Mladenov has also been seeking a long-term truce between the two sides in recent weeks.

Mladenov said on Twitter that “restraint must be shown by all”.

After an Israeli security cabinet meeting that reportedly lasted some six hours yesterday, a statement was issued saying the ministers “instructed the (military) to continue its operations as necessary”.

Netanyahu had cut short a visit to Paris as tensions rose and arrived back home on Monday.

The latest round of violence began on Sunday with a botched Israeli special forces operation inside the Gaza Strip that turned deadly. Palestinia­n militants responded with rocket and mortar fire, as well as an anti-tank missile that hit a bus that Hamas said was being used by Israeli soldiers. A soldier was severely wounded in the attack. –

 ?? Picture: EPA ?? SHAME. An Israeli man looks at the border with the Gaza Strip, near the city of Sderot, yesterday.
Picture: EPA SHAME. An Israeli man looks at the border with the Gaza Strip, near the city of Sderot, yesterday.

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