Bloody Sunday in Gaza as 87 Palestinians killed: medics

Bloody Sunday in Gaza as 87 Palestinians killed: medics

GAZA/JERUSALEM - Reuters
Bloody Sunday in Gaza as 87 Palestinians killed: medics

Palestinian medics evacuate a body from Gaza's eastern Shejaiya district on July 20, 2014 AP Photo

A total of 87 Palestinians were killed across Gaza on July 20 as Israel stepped up a major offensive, in the bloodiest single day in the battered enclave in five years. 

Sixty of Sunday's victims died in the war-torn neighbourhood of Shejaiya which lies between Gaza City and the border, where Israel has pressed a blistering offensive, pounding the district to dust and leaving bodies strewn throughout the streets.  
      
Sunday's bloody toll prompted urgent efforts by the International Committee of the Red Cross to broker a temporary ceasefire to allow paramedics to evacuate the dead and wounded in a deal accepted by both sides.
      
Inside the ravaged neighbourhood of Shejaiya, there were hellish scenes of carnage and chaos as a convoy of ambulances rushed in to make the most of the calm, an AFP correspondent said.
      
But it lasted less than an hour, with Israel accusing Hamas militants of firing in violation of the agreement, and saying its forces were "responding accordingly."       

Death toll passes 400

According to figures provided by emergency services spokesman Ashraf al-Qudra, the total number of people killed since the Israel operation began on July 8 stood at 425. That number includes 112 children, 41 women and 25 elderly people.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon headed to the region to add his weight to truce efforts and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas was to hold talks in Qatar with Hamas chief Khaled Meshaal.
      
So far, truce efforts have been rejected by the Islamist Hamas movement, which is the dominant power in Gaza.        

Undaunted by the Israeli bombardment by land, sea and air, it has pressed on with its own assaults which killed another two Israeli soldiers overnight, the army said.                       

As Israel's blistering offensive on Shejaiya showed no sign of easing, thousands could be seen fleeing for their lives after heavy shelling left casualties lying in the streets, an AFP correspondent reported.
      
Footage from the area showed vast clouds of black smoke billowing into the sky as the shelling continued and Gaza's eastern flank burned.        

Ambulances were unable to reach much of the area along the border with Israel because of heavy fire.        
But as the ceasefire got under way, a convoy of ambulances entered, with medics seen picking up at least three dead bodies, including that of a man with his intestines hanging out and his head completely destroyed, the correspondent said.
      
The blackened shells of cars littered the streets along with the burnt-out wreckage of an ambulance, as smoke poured from areas that were still burning.
      
At least four men carrying machine-guns could be seen among the people evacuating the area, some of them masked, the correspondent said.
      
Among the dead were women and children, as well as a Palestinian paramedic and a cameraman who were killed when the ambulance they were in was hit, with the ongoing fire hampering efforts to recover the bodies.        

"He wasn't a fighter, he was a fighter for humanity," wailed one relative as the family buried him.         "He was an ambulance worker, did he deserve to die?"                        

At Gaza City's Shifa hospital, casualties were being brought in by the minute, some in ambulances, others in cars and trucks.
      
Among them were many children screaming in agony, some peppered with shrapnel wounds.        

"This is the worst I've ever seen it," said Doctor Said Hassan, who has worked at the hospital for eight years.  
     
Fights broke out in the emergency room as hysterical parents banged on the walls in fear and sorrow.
      
"The shelling was non-stop, it was everywhere," Sabah Mamluk, 40, told AFP.        

"We ran into the streets and started to walk. It was terrifying," she said.
      
Meanwhile, the Israeli army confirmed a total of four soldiers had been killed on Saturday, among them two who died in a militant raid inside Israel, another who was killed by an anti-tank missile while the fourth died in a firefight.
      
An Israeli Bedouin man was also killed on Saturday, raising the Israeli death toll to seven - five soldiers and two civilians.        

Israel said its ground operation to destroy the network of tunnels used by militants to stage cross-border attacks was to "expand" later Sunday.        

"This evening, the ground phase of Operation Protective Edge expands, as additional forces join the effort to combat terror in the Gaza Strip and establish a reality in which Israeli residents can live in safety and security," the army said.
                      
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has put the blame for civilian casualties squarely on Hamas, accusing the group of "using innocent civilians as human shields."       

Earlier this week, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, expressed outrage after finding 20 rockets stored in one of its empty schools in Gaza.
      
So far, UNRWA has opened 55 of its schools to shelter those fleeing the most heavily bombarded areas, with more than 63,000 people taking refuge in them, the agency said.
      
Meanwhile, Hamas confirmed Meshaal had received an invitation for talks in Cairo on an Egyptian peace initiative.
      
A similar proposal earlier this week was accepted by Israel but snubbed by Hamas.