Israel bombs UN compound in Gaza City while
United Nations Secretary General BAN is in Israel to try to stop military operationJanuary 15, 2009 - The IDF has bombed the main, large, UNRWA compound in Gaza City today -- just as United Nations Secretary-General BAN Ki-Moon is in Israel trying to do something to stop the unprecedented Israeli military operation against Gaza.
At least one hospital in Gaza City was hit -- putting the lives of over 100 patients at risk -- as the head of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) met top Israeli officials.The AP has reported that "The UN chief says he has expressed 'strong protest and outrage' to Israel over the shelling of a United Nations compound in Gaza City. Ban Ki-moon is demanding an investigation into Thursday's shelling. He says Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak has told him it was a 'grave mistake'."
Barak also told BAN, however, that the IDF was merely returning fire that had come from inside the UNRWA building.
The JPost said Thursday afternoon that in a meeting earlier in the day at the Defense Ministry in downtown Tel Aviv (it's called the Kiriya), Barak told BAN and ICRC President Jacob Kellenberger that "IDF soldiers would continue to return fire in self-defense" ... while at the same time facilitating "all necessary humanitarian work of the UN" -- and continuing "to prevent harm to civilians to the best of its ability".
The AP added that "
The compound has been serving as a shelter for hundreds of people fleeing Israel's devastating offensive in Gaza. UN spokesman Chris Gunness says at least three people were wounded. The entire area is engulfed in smoke and it's not clear whether anyone is still inside the compound. The compound includes the headquarters of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees [UNRWA], a school and other offices. Gunness says large amounts of aid supplies, as well as fuel trucks, could soon be destroyed".
UNRWA officials said that there was evidence that phosphorous bombs had been used to hit its compound. They categorically ruled out any possibility that militants had been firing from the compound.
Some 700 terrified people had been admitted to the compound on Thursday morning, just before the strike, as the IDF attacks on Gaza City intensified. A very large quantity of food supplies and other badly-needed humanitarian supplies were destroyed in the strike.
UNRWA'S Director of Operations in Gaza, John Ging, said that UN had warned the Israeli military that the compound was in peril from shelling that had begun overnight. The UN had earlier provided the IDF with global positioning system coordinates (GPS)for all UN installations in Gaza.UNSG BAN met various Israeli officials today, as did the head of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Jacob Kellenberger. The German Foreign Minister is around, and the Spanish Foreign Minister was here a day or two ago. Diplomats are tripping over each other to express their "shock" and perhaps even more -- but it's not really having a big impact here.
Air and naval strikes began on 27 December, a ground operation began on 3 January, and moved into a new phase today, as IDF forces plunged into several main population areas.
At a briefing in Ashkelon yesterday, IDF Major Avital Liebowitz told journalists that Phase III of the IDF Operation Cast Lead was not underway yet. But maybe were we in Phase 2.75? Intuition told me that the timing of the briefing was probably significant, and something was about to change. Asked after the briefing about Phase III, Israel Air Force Brigadier General (Reserve) Relik Shapir was very reluctant to deny an imminent development -- like many senior military men, he apparently did not want to say an outright lie. When? Tonight?, I asked. He just smiled, mutely, and bobbed his head.
But, all reports indicate a major new IDF push into Gaza City is occurring as of this morning (Thursday), the 20th day of Operation Cast Lead, and panicked civilians are running in terror in every direction -- that is, if they are able to run.
AP wrote that "Thousands of Gaza City residents fled their homes on Thursday morning as ground forces made their deepest foray yet into a crowded residential area, on Day 20 of its offensive on the Hamas-ruled coastal territory. Israeli troops backed by helicopter gunships, tanks and heavy guns thrust further into the city than ever before to seek out Hamas fighters, executing the army's most relentless shelling of the Gaza Strip in nearly three weeks of fighting ... Much of the fighting was centred in the Tel al-Hawa neighborhood, where some residents fled on foot while others remained in the precarious shelter of their homes as a night-time attack stretched into the morning. Tanks and bulldozers rolled into a neighborhood park, apparently seizing it as a kind of command center, witnesses said. Masked gunmen ran toward the areas under fire carrying bags containing unidentified objects. Residents were seen fleeing their homes in pajamas, some wheeling elderly parents in wheelechairs. Others were stopping journalists' armored cars or ambulances pleading for someone to take them to safety. Israeli forces have encircled the city of 500,000 people for days. Tanks have made forays towards the center to test the resistance of Hamas and other militant groups but have balked at launching all-out urban warfare in Gaza City, where Hamas militants are more familiar with the lay of the land and Israeli casualties would be liable to spiral. Israel Air Force planes struck some 70 targets overnight, including weapons positions, rocket squads and a mosque in southern Gaza that it said served as an arsenal, the military said".
The report also said that "The Al-Quds hospital in Gaza City was engulfed with flames after apparently being hit by Israel Defense Forces fire, as Israeli ground troops pentrated the city on Thursday". A message from SMS Israel reported a few minutes ago that part of Gaza City's main hospital, Ash-Shifa, is up in flames. This has not been confirmed, but if it is, this development would be catastrophic for health care in what is today the main battlefield.
According to an ICRC statement issued on Thursday afternoon, Kellengerger had "insisted in his meetings this morning with Israel's Defense and Foreign Ministers that all parties to the conflict must comply with international humanitarian law", and that "the rules of international humanitarian law oblige the parties to a conflict to spare civilians and to protect medical personnel and medical facilities at all times". In addition, the ICRC said, Kellenberger "requested systematic access to all parts of Gaza for humanitarian assistance, especially medical assistance". This statement could have been stronger.
Israel's Foreign Minister told Kellenberger, in their meeting, that the ICRC should do more to insist on access to Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, who was captured near Kerem Shalom in a cross-border raid at the end of June 2006 -- and who is still being held somewhere in Gaza.
Agence France Presse (AFP) reported Thursday that there are also tank thrusts in Khan Yunis, to the south, and "pitched battles" in Jabaliya, in the northern part of the Gaza Strip, which is about 25 miles long and about 6 miles wide. And, AFP said, some families ran to Gaza City's hospitals as Thursday's strikes began, in a desperate search for shelter: " 'I brought the children to the hospital because they were scared at home, but here they are even more terrified', 40-year-old Hossein said as he huddled with his wife and five children at a hospital in Gaza City where they took shelter shortly after dawn. 'We can't take this any longer. Look at my children, they're trembling', he said as explosions ripped through the air like thunderclaps and Israeli troops and Hamas fighters clashes less than 300 metres (yards) away".
Reuters reported that "A senior Western diplomat said Israel appeared to be trying to make last-minute gains on the ground before a truce could be imposed. 'It's a classic Israeli strategy', the diplomat said. Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said in broadcast remarks that Israel's armed forces would 'fight up to the last minute'."
And, in the afternoon on Thursday, the Jerusalem Post's well-connected in the Defense Ministry correspondent Yaakov Katz reported that "IAF planes attacked five armed Palestinians in Gaza overnight Wednesday, who turned out to be the personal bodyguards of senior Hamas official Mahmoud Al-Zahar, the IDF announced Thursday. The five men were allegedly guarding Zahar's house in southern Gaza City and were all killed, according to reports".
Zahar is one of the most senior and most important Hamas leaders. He lost a second son to a clash during a surprise IDF incursion into Gaza exactly a year ago today, and this sparked an increase in reprisal firing from Gaza. In 2003, Zahar's home was hit by a direct IAF air strike, in an assassination attempt, and he lost his first son. A daughter was injured, and his wife was paralyzed after suffering a spinal injury in the same strike.
The Zahar family house -- rebuilt in the same spot as the first home that was destroyed by the direct airstrike -- is large, and well known. This journalist visited the home, with a number of other reporters, just after the mid-June 2007 Hamas take-over from Fatah security forces in the Gaza Strip. Zahar opened the front gate to the home himself, to receive our group.
SMS-Israel reported Thursday afternoon that the IDF had surrounded Zahar's house, but this was not confirmed by any other report, and there was no further word by 10pm in Jerusalem Thursday night.
Though it was reported at the beginning of Operation Cast Lead that the entire Hamas senior leadership had gone into hiding, this may not be true.
Another Hamas leader, Said Siyam, was killed in an air force strike on a home in Gaza City. The IDF later reported that he oversaw the Hamas armed forces – including the Hamas Executive Force, its police force and its naval force. The IDF also said that his brother, Iyad Siyam, and Salah Abu Shrakh, the head of the Hamas general security service, were also killed in the air strike. Ma´an News Agency later added that Said Siyam´s son was also killed, and in a further update Ma'an reported that "Hamas condemned the killing of Siyam´s son, brother Iyad and sister-in-law, as well as her son, who was killed along with four other neighbors near the home. Ten Palestinians were killed in the airstrike, including Siyam and five of his family members".
At least 20 rockets were fired from Gaza into Israeli areas around the beseiged coastal strip -- areas where I was driving around yesterday (near Ofakim, Netivot, Sderot -- where the ICRC chief Jacob Kellenberger visited earlier in the day), after getting lost while taking back roads without my map, driving down to Ashkelon after attending a earlier press conference in Jerusalem. It was beautiful and calm in the area yesterday, though there had also been rockets fired there earlier in the day. A few helicopters patrolled slowly overhead, and more police vans than usual were out on the otherwise empty roads. It was warm, and sunny, under a blue sky with sheer veils of white clouds spread out over the horizon. There were groves of orange trees, with ripe oranges hanging amid dark green foliage ready for picking, and well-tended and glistening-green fields interspersed with areas of plowed brown earth ready for planting. At a major road at the outskirts of Ashkelon, suddenly, the highway is decorated with double white-and-blue Israeli flags flying on the lampposts. Many police vans were patrolling in Ashkelon, too, and many of them -- as well as many private cars -- had Israeli flags waving.
By the end of the day on Thursday, Injuries were reported at the end of the day on Thursday following a Katyusha or Grad missile attack that hit the Israeli city of Beer Sheva, in the Negev desert.
On the other side of what looks, visually, like a rather open border, the attacks in Gaza are being pursued without let-up.
Over 1,000 Palestinians are reported dead since the IDF attacks began on 27 December, and over 5,000 wounded.
Journalists also came under fire in Gaza City.The Foreign Press Association (FPA) said it was "alarmed to learn of the heavy firepower currently being employed by Israeli forces against the building in Gaza City that houses the Reuters news agency and other international media outlets. Initial reports are that these attacks have caused injury and damage. We also note that IDF bullets entered the windows of the offices of the Associated Press in a different part of the city today.
We call on the military to halt this fire immediately. These are buildings housing journalists working for international news agencies and must not be targeted. We note that these buildings are well known landmarks in Gaza and that the IDF has been clearly notified of their location on several occasions". Not long afterwards, the FPA, in an urgent notice to members, said that it "rejects and condemns the IDF policy of controlling the news coverage of the events in Gaza. By preventing the entry of foreign journalists into Gaza and bombing buildings housing offices of international media – contrary to IDF assurances that these media buildings would be safe - the IDF is severely violating basic principles of respect for press freedom. As a result of these unconscionable breaches, the FPA calls on all its members not to broadcast or print stills and videos the IDF provides as a substitute to independent reporting - until such time the IDF issues a formal apology for the attacks on the media buildings and offers assurances that no such event will occur in the future".
The FPA executive was furious that an initial response from the IDF that arrived shortly afterwards said that "The IDF only targets buildings or locations 1) used by the Hamas for terrorist purposes, or 2) from which fire at IDF troops or Israeli civilians emanates. The IDF does not prevent journalists from entering Gaza, 15 journalists have entered the Gaza Strip together with IDF forces".
The FPA noted for the record that "EMBEDS do not qualify as 'free access'."
The FPA is continuing to pursuing an appeal to Israel's Supreme Court for immediate access to foreign journalists to cover the on-going military operation.
By late afternoon in Jerusalem on Thursday, the FPA informed its members that "the FPA lawyers despatched a letter to the State Attorney's office and the Defense Ministry lawyers demanding immediate implementation of the agreement reached under the auspices of the Israeli Supreme Court to let the foreign media into Gaza via Erez". The FPA added that it "rejects out of hand accusations by government spokespeople to the effect that Hamas is controlling all the visual images coming out of Gaza. This accusation is totally untrue, totally outrageous and the sort of thinking on the Israeli side that puts all our journalists at severe risk".
Israeli human rights groups who launched an appeal against the "Clear and Present Danger" facing Palestinian civilians in Gaza while the IDF pursues its attacks say that the Israeli High Court of Justice will convene in about two hours (at 16h30 in Jerusalem) to consider the situation. GISHA director Sari Bashi said in a message overnight that "Israel' s Supreme Court will hold a second hearing in two urgent petitions brought by human rights groups in Israel. The petitions demand: 1.) That the military refrain from attacking medical teams in Gaza and permit the wounded to be evacuated to hospitals 2.) That the Defense Minister supply fuel and electricity to run Gaza ' s hospitals, water wells, and sewage pumps, and permit technicians to fix the crumbling infrastructure".
GISHA explained as background that £"The Court ordered the hearing after receiving a written update from the State on January 13, claiming that the State was doing enough to protect the civilian population in Gaza. The human rights groups argue that Israel is failing to fulfill its obligations under international law to protect Gaza' s 1.5 million civilians – and that the factual presentation made by the State is incomplete, to say the least. They cite as an example the State's court filing from January 13, 2009 in which it informed the court that it allowed a small quantity of spare parts for the electricity grid to enter Gaza on January 9 – which is true. But the state neglected to mention that on January 13 – it bombed the warehouse where those parts were stored, destroying most of them."
The Jerusalem Post is reporting today that the chairman of the Israeli Medical Association (IMA), Dr. Yoram Blachar, has expressed "deep concern about the situation in Gaza" -- and he is now working to establish an international field hospital inside Gaza to treat the ill and wounded. The JPost article noted that the IMA had "suggested to Health Ministry Director-General Prof. Avi Yisraeli that Israel allow the erection of a field facility on the border with Gaza to care for the wounded and seriously ill. The ministry agreed."
Israeli journalist Gideon Levy -- who has a powerful voice, but not one that is echoed among the majority of the Israeli population - wrote in Haaretz today: "God does not show mercy on the children at Gaza's nursery schools, and neither does the Israel Defense Forces. That's how it goes when war is waged in such a densely populated area with a population so blessed with children. About half of Gaza's residents are under 15. No pilot or soldier went to war to kill children. Not one among them intended to kill children, but it also seems neither did they intend not to kill them. They went to war after the IDF had already killed 952 Palestinian children and adolescents since May 2000. The public's shocking indifference to these figures is incomprehensible.
"A thousand propagandists and apologists cannot excuse this criminal killing. One can blame Hamas for the death of children, but no reasonable person in the world will buy these ludicrous, flawed propagandistic goods in light of the pictures and statistics coming from Gaza. One can say Hamas hides among the civilian population, as if the Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv is not located in the heart of a civilian population, as if there are places in Gaza that are not in the heart of a civilian population. One can also claim that Hamas uses children as human shields, as if in the past our own organizations fighting to establish a country did not recruit children. A significant majority of the children killed in Gaza did not die because they were used as human shields or because they worked for Hamas. They were killed because the IDF bombed, shelled or fired at them, their families or their apartment buildings. That is why the blood of Gaza's children is on our hands, not on Hamas' hands, and we will never be able to escape that responsibility". His article can be read in full here:
The IDF has no mercey for the children in Gaza nursery schools by Gideon Levy
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I guess Israel will now claim Hamas was firing rockets into Israel from within the United Nations compound
