Washington’s top diplomat John Kerry has said that global efforts to end 17 days of bloodshed in Gaza were progressing as the Palestinian death toll rose to 718 Thursday and airlines kept flights to Israel suspended over rocket fears.
A family of six, including a five-year-old girl and boy of three, were among 21 killed in Israeli airstrikes Thursday as a flurry of intensive diplomacy efforts by world leaders pressed on in the region. Another two died from wounds sustained earlier.
The Hamas movement rejected any truce without the lifting of Israel’s eight-year blockade on Gaza.
“We will not accept any initiative that does not lift the blockade on our people and that does not respect their sacrifices,” Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal said.
As US Secretary of State John Kerry and UN chief Ban Ki-moon held talks in Jerusalem, they said they had pooled their efforts in the hope of boosting the quest for a truce.
“We have certainly made some steps forward, but there is still work to be done,” Kerry said as he met the UN chief for the second time this week.
“We are now joining our forces in strength to make a ceasefire as soon as possible,” Ban said, warning there was no time to lose as concern mounted over the rising civilian body count.
The US diplomat offered a similar message to the Palestinians as he met president Mahmud Abbas in the West Bank city of Ramallah.
“We have in the last 24 hours made some progress in moving toward that goal,” he said before heading to Tel Aviv for talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The men met for about two hours but made no statements after their talks.
Kerry then left for Cairo and Netanyahu opened a meeting of his security cabinet.
Britain joined the truce efforts with new Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond holding late-night talks with Abbas, saying a ceasefire was not enough.
“We will work for a stable solution that allows Palestinians and Israelis to live in peace together,” Hammond said.
Ban also brought up the Gaza conflict in a meeting with Saudi King Abdullah in Jeddah, according to the official SPA news agency.
US lifts ban on flights to Tel Aviv
Meanwhile, the US national aviation authority lifted a ban on American flights to Israel late Wednesday, but warned of a “very fluid situation” amid intense fighting in the Gaza Strip.
After a rocket fired by Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip struck a house just north of Israel’s main airport in Tel Aviv, the Federal Administration Agency imposed the ban on Tuesday and then renewed it midday Wednesday. European allies replicated the move.
“The FAA has lifted its restrictions on US airline flights into and out of Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport by cancelling a Notice to Airmen it renewed earlier today,” the agency said in a statement hours before the ban was due to expire.
Before making its decision, the FAA said it worked with US government officials to evaluate the security situation in Israel and “carefully reviewed both significant new information and measures the government of Israel is taking to mitigate potential risks to civil aviation”. It did not, however, indicate what the new information might entail.
Israel had warned of the economic impact of the ban by many world airlines and said that it would be a win for Hamas. “The FAA said it would “continue to closely monitor the very fluid situation around Ben Gurion Airport and will take additional actions, as necessary. “
At least 718 Palestinians have been killed in 17 days of bloodshed in Gaza, with a local rights group saying more than 80 per cent of them were civilians.
Death toll mounts
Palestinian medics said Israeli attacks on Thursday hiked the death toll to 718 with a Gaza-based rights group saying more than 80 per cent of them were civilians.
Thursday saw 21 killed, and 66 died in bombardments on Wednesday, medics said — most of them in Khuzaa on the Israeli border, close to the southern city of Khan Yunis.
In the occupied West Bank, a Palestinian died Wednesday after being shot by Israeli troops, Palestinian officials said.
The Israeli army said three more soldiers were killed in combat inside Gaza on Wednesday, raising the total number of soldiers killed since the start of a ground operation on July 17 to 32.
A Thai farm labourer also died when a rocket fired from Gaza struck the greenhouse where he was working in southern Israel, police said.
On the ground, the fighting was briefly suspended in several flashpoint areas to allow ambulances to extricate the wounded, the International Committee of the Red Cross said.
A spokeswoman said seven ambulances had entered Shejaiya near Gaza City and another nine ambulances had entered Khuzaa, while a third convoy had entered Beit Hanun in the north.
In Gaza City, hundreds of people, mostly women and children, packed into the pews of Saint Porphyrios Greek Orthodox church seeking shelter from the violence outside.
As the violence raged on, UN rights chief Navi Pillay condemned both Israel and Hamas at an emergency session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.
She said Israeli attacks which had killed civilians, among them children, “could amount to war crimes” but also denounced Hamas for its “indiscriminate attacks” on Israeli civilians. The Gaza-based Palestinian Centre for Human Rights said 81.5 per cent of the dead were civilians, 24 per cent of them children.
The UN Human Rights Council voted to launch a probe into Israel’s Gaza offensive.
The US was the sole member to vote against, while European countries abstained. A statement from the Israeli prime minister’s office said the council’s decision was “a travesty and should be rejected by decent people everywhere”.
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