Israeli bombardment has now left 119 dead in Gaza: health ministry

Israeli bombardment has now left 119 dead in Gaza: health ministry
Gaza's health ministry said 119 people, including 31 children, have now died as Israeli bombardment continues.
5 min read
Destruction caused by the bombing in Gaza, photographed on 13 May [Getty]

Israel bombarded Gaza with artillery and air strikes on Friday following more rocket fire from the Hamas-run enclave, intensifying a conflict that has now claimed 127 lives, the vast majority Palestinian.

The Israeli army said its overnight operation involved fighter jets and tanks hitting a Hamas tunnel network dug under civilian areas.

It said it "wasn't feasible this time" to forewarn civilians as it did ahead of strikes on Gaza tower blocks earlier this week.

However, speaking following the bombing of a well-known building, Gaza resident Amal Shurrab told Al-Jazeera such measures, plus so-called "warning missiles", are designed to cause torment.

She explained: "Israel does not care about killing civilians".

The bombardment saw huge fireballs turn the night sky orange as explosions rocked the ground.

Read more: Sheikh Jarrah and the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in East Jerusalem

Several homes in densely populated Gaza were destroyed or heavily damaged, AFP correspondents reported while rockets tore through the skies towards Israel.

Muhammad Najib, a 16-year-old resident of Gaza City's Rimal neighbourhood, compared the bombing to a video game. "It's like a horror film," he said.

The most intense escalation since 2014 between Israel and Palestinian militants in Gaza has also seen Israeli soldiers massing on the edge of the blockaded territory.

Army spokesman Jonathan Conricus on Friday took responsibility for an erroneous overnight report that ground forces had entered Gaza, but confirmed ground troops had taken part in an operation carried out from Israeli territory targeting tunnels dug under the border. 

"There are no... ground troops inside Gaza at the moment," he said. 

Gaza's health minister said 119 Palestinians, including 31 children, have died while more than 830 have been wounded.      

An Israeli woman in her 80s died overnight on Thursday from injuries sustained while seeking shelter from rocket fire, bringing the toll on the Israeli side to eight dead, including a six-year-old boy and a soldier. 

Immediate de-escalation

Sheikh Jarrah, East Jerusalem: A history of dispossession
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Israeli security forces have also been scrambling to contain deadly intercommunal violence between Jews and Arabs, and rockets have been fired from Lebanon, including what has been described as a "lynching" of a man thought to be Palestinian by a far-right mob.

The United Nations said the Security Council would meet on Sunday to address the conflict as Secretary General Antonio Guterres called for a "cessation of hostilities".

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Washington was "deeply concerned about the violence in the streets of Israel", and the State Department urged citizens to "reconsider travel to Israel".

Several international airlines - including KLM, British Airways, Virgin, Lufthansa and Iberia - cancelled flights amid the aerial onslaught. 

In this ongoing violence, Israel has hit roughly 750 sites it described as military targets such as Hamas bomb-making facilities and the homes of senior militant commanders. 

It estimates that more than 30 leaders of Hamas and its ally Islamic Jihad have been killed.

Since Monday, Palestinian militant groups have fired more than 1,800 rockets towards Israel, mostly towards southern cities, but also at Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.

Hundreds have been intercepted by the Iron Dome defence system. 

Three tower blocks in Gaza have been levelled. 

The heavy bombardments coincided with the start of Eid Al-Fitr, which marks the end of the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan, and saw the faithful pray at mosques and amid the rubble of Gaza's collapsed buildings.

Three rockets were also fired from southern Lebanon towards Israel, landing in the Mediterranean Sea, the Israeli army said.

A source close to Israel's arch-enemy Hezbollah said the Lebanese Shiite group had no link to the incident.

'Preventing pogroms'

With the conflict showing no signs of easing, Israel has been rocked by an unprecedented wave of mob violence, in which both Palestinians and Jews have been savagely beaten and police stations attacked.

Defence Minister Benny Gantz ordered a "massive reinforcement" to suppress the internal unrest that has occurred.

Protests have swept the country over the looming evictions of Palestinian families from the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood of East Jerusalem.

The surging tensions sparked clashes in many of Israel's mixed towns where Jews live alongside Palestinians, who make up about 20 percent of the country's population.

More than 750 people have been arrested this week, including more than 100 overnight, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said.

Officers detained Jewish Israelis "walking around looking for trouble" in Netanya and Beersheba, while Palestinian citizens attacked police with petrol bombs, he added. 

In Lod, where an Arab man was shot dead by a Jewish Israeli on Monday, the outside of a synagogue was burnt overnight while 43 people were arrested, Rosenfeld told AFP

In one of the most shocking episodes of the intercommunal violence, a far-right mob beat a man they considered an Arab in Bat Yam, near Tel Aviv on Wednesday, leaving him with serious injuries.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said police were increasing their use of force, warning of the "option" of deploying soldiers in towns.

Netanyahu said the violence was "unacceptable".

"Nothing justifies the lynching of Arabs by Jews, and nothing justifies the lynching of Jews by Arabs," he said, adding Israel was fighting a battle "on two fronts".

Amid the rocket fire, Israel's civil aviation authority said it had diverted all incoming passenger flights headed for Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion airport to Ramon airport in the south.

Hamas announced it had also fired a rocket at Ramon in a bid to stop air traffic to Israel.

The military escalation was triggered by weekend unrest at Jerusalem's Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, which is sacred to both Muslims and Jews.

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