Israel strikes Gaza targets after rocket fire; Israeli negotiators called home
August 19, 2014 -- Updated 1556 GMT (2356 HKT)
Three rockets fired from
Gaza hit the Beer Sheva area in southern Israel Tuesday afternoon, the
Israeli military said. No injuries were reported.
The rocket fire came only
hours after the ceasefire was extended until the end of the day, as
Palestinian and Israeli negotiators, struggling to reach a more lasting
agreement, reported little progress.
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Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu ordered the Israel Defense Forces to respond to the
rockets, a senior Israeli official told CNN. An IDF statement shortly
afterward said strikes were being carried out against targets in Gaza.
"Yet again, terrorists
breach the ceasefire and renew fire at Israeli civilians from Hamas
ruled Gaza Strip," Israel Defense Forces spokesman Peter Lerner said in
the statement.
"This continued
aggression will be addressed accordingly by the IDF; we will continue
striking terror infrastructure, pursuing terrorists, and eliminating
terror capabilities in the Gaza Strip, in order to restore security for
the State of Israel."
It's not yet clear who fired the rockets from Gaza, and no group has claimed responsibility.
However, Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zouhri, in a text message sent to CNN, denied that Hamas was responsible.
"We have no information
about rockets being shot from Gaza to Israel. The aim of the air strikes
on Gaza is to stop the negotiations in Cairo. The Israeli occupation
bears the responsibility for this," he said.
Five Palestinians,
including two children, were wounded in an Israeli airstrike in Rafah,
Ashraf al Qidra, spokesman for the Gaza health department, told CNN.
Al Aqsa TV reported airstrikes in northern and central Gaza, as well.
In Israel, warning
sirens once again sounded in the Sdot Negev area, as Israel's missile
defense system was seen intercepting rockets.
Hamas: Struggle will continue
Izzat Risheq, a Hamas
leader who is part of the Palestinian negotiating delegation in Cairo,
said via Twitter: "The struggle of our people will not depend on whether
we have a truce or not.
"Our struggle, however, will continue on until our peoples' goals of freedom and national independence are achieved."
A thick plume of smoke could be seen rising from a building in southern Gaza apparently hit by an Israeli airstrike.
A CNN team on the ground
also saw earlier what appeared to be three rockets being fired from
Gaza into Israel, leaving smoke trails in the sky.
Shortly before the
rockets were launched, Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said in an e-mailed
statement to CNN: "If Netanyahu does not understand our message and
people's demands in Gaza through political language, we know a way to
make him understand."
A banner on the Hamas-run Al-Aqsa TV blamed Israel for violating the truce.
Cycle of violence
As the deadline for the
end of the truce was pushed back Tuesday morning, officials on both
sides offered little reason for optimism.
"There hasn't been any
progress at all," Azzam al-Ahmed, the lead Palestinian negotiator, told
reporters, dismissing earlier reports that a deal was set to be signed.
"We hope that every
minute in the next 24 hours will be used so we can reach an agreement,
or the cycle of violence will continue," he said.
Negotiating through
Egyptian go-betweens, Israel and the Palestinians had been attempting
over the past week to resolve longstanding issues amid a temporary
ceasefire in the deadly fighting in and around Gaza.
Under the latest extension, the truce was set to expire at midnight Tuesday ( 5 p.m. ET.)
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'Very fragile and very explosive'
On Monday, Mustafa
Barghouti, leader of the Palestinian National Initiative, accused the
Israelis of blocking the path to an agreement. He said by phone from
Gaza, after returning from Cairo, that the situation is "very fragile
and very explosive."
Meanwhile, Netanyahu
said that Israel was "prepared for any scenario," with the Israeli
military ready "for a very firm action if fire is resumed."
Israeli forces have
remained positioned around Gaza since they withdrew two weeks ago after
destroying more than 30 tunnels, some of which extended under the border
into Israel.
The conflict, which began in early July, has killed more than 2,000 Palestinians, leaving entire Gaza neighborhoods in rubble.
The violence has killed 67 people on the Israeli side, with militants in Gaza firing roughly 3,500 rockets toward Israel.
'Impossible demands'
In the talks, Israel was
calling for Gaza to be demilitarized, demanding that Hamas, which
controls the territory, and other militant groups lay down their arms.
Risheq, the Hamas leader, said Monday that the group's weapons were "for self-defense" against Israel.
"But when we have our
own Palestinian state with its own national army to protect its
citizens, there will be no need for any party to carry any kind of
weapons," he said.
Speaking on condition of
anonymity Monday, a Hamas leader said the Israelis had "submitted
impossible demands on the Palestinians such as the issue of
demilitarization, destroying the tunnels and the issue of preventing
Palestinians from developing their missiles technology."
The Israelis, he said, "want everything and want to give nothing."
He said the Palestinians
had responded with a counterproposal offering Israel "full security in
exchange of full opening of border crossings" or lifting the siege
completely.
Dispute over blockade
But a senior Israeli official suggested to CNN that there were contradictions coming from the Palestinian side.
"How can Israel have
full security while they're still digging terror tunnels and making
rockets?" he asked, saying the Palestinians "can't cherry pick what they
want."
Palestinians say
Israel's blockade is throttling the economy of the small, impoverished
strip of land and the lives of its inhabitants.
Among their demands are the rebuilding and reopening of Gaza's airport and the establishment of a seaport.
But Israeli authorities
-- who retain control of Gaza's airspace, Mediterranean waters and their
shared border -- say that releasing their grip on what goes into and
out of the territory isn't feasible while Hamas and other groups are
still building up their arsenals of weapons.
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