
The initial 24 hours of new ceasefire negotiations, mediated by Egyptian officials, have not yet produced any tangible outcomes, and Thursday evening’s first death on Israeli land is likely to bring the two sides closer to a full-scale conflict.
written by Chris Muhizi Minembwe Capital News 12:44pm Kampala Uganda Time.
Israelis living in the coastal enclave and the 2.3 million Palestinians living under siege in the embattled Gaza Strip who have nowhere else to go fear a larger escalation as the tit-for-tat fire continues without interruption and the number of casualties rises.
Mohammad Abu el-Subbah, 24, said to Reuters outside a bakery in Gaza City, “We can’t sleep at night because we fear about bombardment. “No one knows what will happen next, whether a truce will be called or not.
Senior international figures, including the EU, UN, US, and neighbours Jordan and Egypt, released comments encouraging de-escalation between Israel and Palestinian terrorists.
According to Muhammad al-Hindi, a representative of Islamic Jihad, the groups in Gaza would cease fire if Israel agreed to halt its targeted assassination operations, which has so far been rejected.
In the deadliest outbreak of violence in the area in months, fighting between Israel and terrorist groups in the blockaded Gaza Strip has escalated for the third day despite truce efforts mediated by Egypt. 29 individuals have been killed in Gaza, including at least 10 civilians, and one civilian has been murdered in Israel.
Despite a tenuous ceasefire in place since a day of cross-frontier fire last week, Israel launched surprise airstrikes targeting the homes of three senior commanders of Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the second-most powerful organisation in the Gaza Strip after Hamas, early on Tuesday.
Josep Borrell, the head of the EU’s foreign policy, stated, “We urge an immediate comprehensive ceasefire which will end Israeli military operations in Gaza and current rocket firing against Israel, which is unacceptable.”
Vedant Patel, the deputy spokeswoman for the US State Department, said: “We continue to urge on all sides to take measures that will not escalate tensions and violent conflict, and of course, would want both parties to take judicious measures to ensure that civilian life is protected.
Throughout the day, Israel’s southern and central regions were also repeatedly targeted by rocket fire. Nearly 200 missiles were intercepted by Israel’s effective Iron Dome air defence system, while the Israeli military claimed to have successfully used the new David’s Sling mid-range air defence missile system for the first time without providing any more information.
Israeli medical personnel report that one rocket killed one person and badly injured five others when it struck an apartment block in the city of Sderot on Thursday afternoon.
Following the initial explosives on Tuesday, Islamic Jihad and Hamas threatened retribution. On Wednesday afternoon, they launched a volley of rockets at Tel Aviv, the nation’s business and cultural centre, which is around 40 miles (65 km) distant.
However, there has been no movement in the cease-fire negotiations: “Egypt’s efforts to calm things down and resume the political process have not yet borne fruit,” Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry told reporters in Berlin.
Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, warned that there would not soon be a break in the strikes.
During a visit to an airfield, he made a filmed remark in which he declared that “whoever comes to harm us – his blood is forfeit.”
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been more tense in recent months. To already in 2023, more than 125 Palestinians, at least 20 Israelis, and foreigners have died in Israel, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip.





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