Palestinian mourners carry Ahmed al-Jabari’s body at his funeral in Gaza. Photograph : APAimages/Rex Features
**
Egypt’s president, Mohamed Morsi, has condemned Israel’s
"aggression", as three Israelis were killed by a Hamas rocket, Israel
continued to pound the Gaza Strip and the enclave lurched closer to
all-out war.
In his harshest criticism of Israel since taking office in June,
Morsi expressed his solidarity with the "people of Gaza" and the
Palestinians. Speaking in Cairo, Morsi said he had withdrawn Egypt’s
ambassador to Israel and appealed to the UN to intervene to halt the
spiralling violence.
"The Israelis must realise that this aggression is unacceptable and
would only lead to instability in the region," Morsi declared. His
remarks illustrate the new and potentially volatile dynamics of the
situation in the region, with Egypt’s post-revolutionary government
expressing strong support for Hamas.
The peace treaty between Egypt and Israel now looks increasingly
fragile, following the ousting of Hosni Mubarak in February last year,
and as the violent confrontation between Hamas and Israel worsens. Morsi
said he had spoken to the US president, Barack Obama, by phone. The
Egyptian president said he wanted to maintain good relations with the US
while "rejecting this aggression and the spilling of blood and the
blockade of Palestinians".
Israeli warplanes bombed targets on Thursday in and around Gaza City,
where tall buildings trembled. Plumes of smoke and dust furled into a
sky laced with the vapour trails of outgoing rockets, Reuters reported.
The Palestinian death toll rose to 15, with the victims including a
woman pregnant with twins, an 11-month-old boy and two infants. At least
130 people had been wounded, Gaza’s health ministry said. Israel said
it had struck 156 targets in Gaza, 126 of them rocket launchers.
The Israeli military onslaught follows the assassination on Wednesday
of Ahmed al-Jabari, the commander of Hamas’s military wing. His corpse
was borne through the streets wrapped in a bloodied white shroud.
Thousands of mostly young men attended his funeral on Thursday, crowding
around his grave. Mourners strained to stroke Jabari’s face and clutch
his hands. The funeral took place against a backdrop of gunfire, with
tracers from Israel’s Iron Dome missile-defence batteries visible,
shooting down rockets fired from Gaza.
Witnesses spoke of a mood of fear. Hamas supporters, many wearing
trademark Hamas baseball caps, fired in the air at the funeral to
celebrate news of the three Israeli deaths. There were chants for Jabari
of : "You have won." Senior Hamas figures stayed away, wary of Israel’s
warning that they are now considered targets. Militants in the Gaza
Strip pounded southern Israel with rocket fire.
Life on both sides of the border came to a standstill, the Associated
Press reported, with Gaza’s streets mostly empty as the strip came
under Israeli attack. Residents in southern Israel remained huddled
indoors or close to home, and were under orders to stay in bomb
shelters. The three Israelis were killed when a rocket hit their
four-storey building in the town of Kiryat Malachi, 15 miles north of
Gaza. A four-year-old boy and two babies were also wounded. The victims
were the first on the Israeli side since the violence started.
Israel said 200 rockets had struck Israel since Wednesday, 135 since
midnight. Israel’s Iron Dome missile-defence batteries had shot down 18
of them, officials said. Hamas claimed it had fired a one-tonne rocket
at Tel Aviv, but there was no sign of an impact in the city.
"The military will continue acting to establish deterrence against
Hamas and to return the calm," the defence minister, Ehud Barak, said
during a tour of southern Israel. He praised citizens for coping with
the "tough moments to come".
Qatar, Jordan, Iran and Syria all condemned the Israeli operation on
Thursday. It amounts to the most serious fighting between Israel and
Hamas for four years. William Hague, the British foreign secretary,
blamed Hamas and said it bore "principal responsibility for the current
crisis". He also urged Israel to reduce tensions and avoid civilian
casualties. On Wednesday the Obama administration unequivocally backed
Israel and said it had a right to self-defence.
(Harriet Sherwood in Gaza, The guardian - Thursday 15 November 2012)
Lancé le 19 décembre 2011, "Si Proche Orient" est un blog d'information internationale. Sa mission est de couvrir l’actualité du Moyen-Orient et de l'Afrique du Nord avec un certain regard et de véhiculer partout dans le monde un point de vue pouvant amener au débat. "Si Proche Orient" porte sur l’actualité internationale de cette région un regard fait de diversité des opinions, de débats contradictoires et de confrontation des points de vue.Il propose un décryptage approfondi de l’actualité .
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