Search This Blog

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Israel 'to announce ceasefire'


Like a cop who has subdued the neighborhood bully, the Israeli military is set to give the bully a chance to stop being beaten. Of course, some bullies are just so stupid that they don't know when to quit picking on their neighbors... so the cop will probably have to continue using the "night stick."

From the BBC News:

The Israeli cabinet is set to back an end to offensive

military activities in the Gaza Strip, three weeks after

attacks began, the BBC understands.

Smoke rises from the Rafah refugee camp after an Israeli missile strike on 17 January 2009
Air strikes continued in Gaza as Israel prepared to announce a truce


Israel's leaders are expected to approve a ceasefire at a meeting later on Saturday, after which PM Ehud Olmert will address the nation, sources said.

The sources said the ceasefire deal did not involve Hamas.

It is not clear how Hamas will respond; its officials say the group will ignore any truce unless its demands are met.

Ahead of the move violence continued in Gaza, with 50 Israeli air strikes overnight. Rocket fire from Hamas militants also continued.

Nearly 1,200 Palestinians have been killed since the violence began on 27 December. Thirteen Israelis - three civilians and 10 soldiers - have been killed during the campaign.

'H-Hour'

The Israeli move comes amid intense diplomacy aimed at ending the conflict.

Israeli sources told the BBC's Middle East editor, Jeremy Bowen, that Mr Olmert would announce an end to offensive military operations from "H-Hour", the exact timing of which is not yet clear.

GAZA LATEST
An Israeli man gestures as a fireman inspects the damage inside his house after a rocket attack in the southern Israeli town of Sderot on 15 January 2009

In a televised address set for 2200 (2000 GMT), Mr Olmert was expected to link the move to Israel having achieved its goal of curtailing rocket fire from Hamas-linked militants, the sources said.

If rocket fire continued after "H-Hour", Israel would respond, the sources said.

If there was a single incident, Israel would hit back "surgically"; if there were more attacks Israel would go back on the offensive, they said.

The sources stressed that this was a unilateral action by Israel.

It follows pledges from the US and several European Union nations to help prevent arms smuggling into Gaza - one of Israel's key demands.

How Hamas responds remains to be seen. Its representatives have been attending talks hosted by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Cairo.

Hamas insists that any ceasefire must involve Israeli troops withdrawing from Gaza and an immediate lifting of the Israeli blockade.

Earlier Osama Hemdan, the Hamas representative in Lebanon, told the AFP news agency: "As long as it [the Israeli military] remains in Gaza, resistance and confrontation will continue."

UN strike

The announcement came on the 22nd day of violence in Gaza.

United Nations officials said two children, aged five and seven, were killed when Israeli tank fire hit a UN school where hundreds had taken shelter in the northern town of Beit Lahiya.

GAZA CRISIS BACKGROUND

John Ging, the Unrwa chief in Gaza, told the BBC that there was "nowhere safe in Gaza".

"I'm ashamed of this - there's international legal responsibility to protect civilians in conflict, and we're not doing it," Mr Ging said.

An Israeli foreign ministry spokesman, Yigal Palmor, told the BBC that Israel was waiting for more information on what happened.

The Israel military said Hamas fired seven rockets into Israel on Saturday; there were no casualties.

No comments: