அஸ்ஸலாமு அலைக்கும்.அன்பு தோழர்கள் அனைவரையும் என்னுடைய இணைய தளத்திற்கு வரவேற்கிறேன்.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Israel use White phosphorous

Israel pushes deeper, sends reserves into Gaza
Smoke billowed from Gaza following an Israeli air strike

GAZA (AlArabiya.net, Agencies)

Israel began pouring reservists into heavy clashes across the Gaza Strip on Sunday as the death toll from its war on Hamas approached 900 and officials indicated that the end may be in sight.

Israeli troops pushed deeper into Gaza's main city, as warplanes carried out at least 50 air strikes on the 16th day of a war launched to combat Palestinian rocket fire, which has continued despite the offensive.

Israel's Channel Two said the army had begun sending in some of the thousands of reservists called up when the war began on Dec. 27, and an army spokesman said they would be increasingly "integrated" into combat units.

Civilians again fell victim in Israel's offensive in Gaza as Israeli troops pushed deeper into Gaza's main city despite indications by the Jewish state Sunday that an end was in sight to its war on Hamas, which has killed nearly 900 people in the Gaza Strip.
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Egyptian injuries

Two women and four children were killed in a strike on a house
in Beit Lahiya, medics and witnesses said. Twelve bodies were pulled
from the rubble in Tal al-Hawa including 10 fighters, according to
medics.

Two Egyptian children and three police officers were wounded by shrapnel from Israeli bombs near a crossing point at Egypt's border with the Gaza Strip, security sources said.

The children, aged two and five, and the three officers were the first Egyptians to be wounded by Israeli bombs since the Israeli offensive against Gaza began on Dec. 27, and were taken to hospitals in el-Arish.

Witnesses said Egyptian houses near the border and government offices at the crossing were damaged by shrapnel.

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Expanding air campaign

Residents flee as troops descend

Israel has expanded its air campaign to the southern Gaza Strip, aiming at smuggling tunnels running under the border with Egypt, a network that is Gaza's lifeline to the outside world.

Israeli officials suggested the Jewish state was nearing the end of its offensive, which has killed hundreds of civilians, despite having last week waved off a U.N. resolution calling for an immediate halt to the fighting.

Israeli troops and Hamas fighters battled in some of their heaviest clashes yet and Palestinians in the densely populated neighborhoods of Gaza City
fled their homes in the face of advancing Israeli troops.

Israeli warplanes bombed more than 60 targets throughout Gaza overnight and into morning, hitting arms depots and smuggling tunnels as well as a mosque that was allegedly used to store weapons and train fighters, the army said, causing mass panic as dozens of Palestinians attempted to flee.

Troops that descended on the southern Tal al-Hawa neighborhood of Gaza
City encountered roadside bombs, mortar and gunfire from Palestinian fighters, witnesses said.

The troops withdrew at daybreak, but hundreds of panicked residents fled the area, clutching small children and hastily packed bags after a sleepless night.

The panic had intensified after the Israeli military dropped leaflets over Gaza City on Saturday to warn citizens that it planned to intensify its operations throughout the coastal strip.

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White phosphorous

" These people were burned over their bodies in a way that can only be caused by white phosphorous "
Gaza doctor

As the death toll spiraled Israel refused to let up as news continued to break of whole families being annihilated at a time. For those that escaped death they were faced with severe wounds that Human Rights Watch (HRW) and doctors said were caused by banned white phosphorous shells that Israel denied using.

HRW has accused Israel of using white-phosphorus munitions and warned of undue suffering to Palestinian civilians through severe burns.

Dr. Yusef Abu Rish at Gaza City's Nasser hospital told AFP that at least 55 people were injured early Sunday by white phosphorous shells, banned under international law for use against civilians, but permitted for creating smokescreens.

"These people were burned over their bodies in a way that can only be caused by white phosphorous, " said Abu Rish.

A military spokeswoman denied the claims. "There is no use of white phosphorous. Everything we use is according to international law," she said.

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