 A Palestinian man sends the body of a six-year-old girl to a
hospital in Gaza, July 8, 2006. The girl's mother and brother were also
dead during Israeli army's air strike. According to Israeli army
sources, about 20 Palestinians were killed over the weekend during Israeli
military operations in the Gaza Strip, increasing the death toll of the
Palestinians to about 50 since Israel launched the "Summer Rain" offensive
on June 28. (Xinhua/AFP Photo) |
 A Palestinian man sends the body of a six-year-old girl to a hospital in
Gaza, July 8, 2006. The girl's mother and brother were also
dead during Israeli army's air strike. (Xinhua/AFP
Photo) |
 Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert speaks at a cabinet
meeting in Jerusalem, July 9, 2006. He said Sunday his country
will continue to carry out military operation in the Gaza Strip, rejecting
a ceasefire proposal by the Palestinians and ignoring criticism of
international community. (Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) |
 Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert(R 2nd) presides
over a cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, July 9, 2006. (Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) |
BEIJING, July 10 (Xinhua) -- Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert said Sunday his country will continue to carry out military
operation in the Gaza Strip, rejecting a ceasefire proposal by the Palestinians
and ignoring criticism of international community.
In order to free a kidnapped soldier and halt rocket
firing by Palestinian militants, there would be no timetable for the ongoing
Israeli military operation in the Gaza Strip, Olmert said at a cabinet meeting
on Sunday.
"This is a war and it can't be assigned a timetable,"
Olmert said.
Olmert also reiterated Israel's stance, refusing to
negotiate with Palestinian militants who took 19-year-old Gilad Shalit hostage,
saying that negotiating with the kidnappers would only encourage future
abductions.
On Saturday, Palestinian Prime Minister and senior
Hamas leader Ismail Haneya called on both Palestinian militants and Israel to
restore calm on the basis of a mutual ceasefire, calling for a negotiated
solution to securing the release of the abducted Israeli soldier.
Israel, however, rebuffed the ceasefire offer,
insisting on the unconditional release of the kidnapped Shalit and a halt to the
Palestinian militants' rocket firing.
Palestinian militant groups taking Shalit hostage
have demanded Israel release Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails in exchange
for Shalit.
During the cabinet meeting, Israeli Defense Minister
Amir Peretz said: "The army is operating in a gradual and planned manner, to
increase pressure on the militants in an effort to free Shalit without any
preconditions."
Peretz said that the operations would focus on
targeting rocket launch sites and areas in which cross-border tunnels may have
been dug by Palestinian militants.
According to Israeli army sources, about 20
Palestinians were killed over the weekend during Israeli military operations in
the Gaza Strip, increasing the death toll of the Palestinians to about 50 since
Israel launched the "Summer Rain" offensive on June 28.
In addition, Israeli air strikes have damaged the
only power plant in the Gaza Strip and key infrastructure including roads,
bridges and main water and electricity supply lines.
The deteriorating situation in the Gaza Strip has
drawn concerns and criticism of the international community.
The United Nations agencies warned on Saturday that
the situation in the Gaza Strip is alarming, and blamed Israel for a
humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
The UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) believed that
the Gaza Strip is on the brink of a public health disaster.
"Since the strike on Gaza's only power plant on June
28, the entire strip is without electricity for between 12 and 18 hours every
day," it said in a statement.
Meanwhile, the World Health Organization (WHO) warned
that the public health system in the Gaza Strip is facing an unprecedented
crisis.
The WHO estimated that the current stock of fuel will
last for a maximum of two weeks, and those generators which are being used by
hospitals were intended for backup purposes and the malfunctioning of these
generators will have grave consequences.
The World Food Program (WFP) estimated that in June,
70 percent of the Gaza population were already unable to cover their daily food
needs without assistance, while the escalation of hostilities has made food an
increasingly critical issue.
U.S. Consul General in Jerusalem Jacob Walles said on
Sunday Washington hoped to secure the release of the abducted Israeli soldier,
while voicing concerns about the humanitarian situation in the Palestinian
territories and the ongoing Israeli Gaza military operation.
"We are also concerned about the Palestinian
civilians and their living conditions in addition to the strained security
conditions in the Gaza Strip," he said in the West Bank city of Ramallah after a
meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.
In addition, Arab countries have decided to push the
UN Security Council to adopt a resolution urging Israel to halt military
operations in the Gaza Strip.
The Arab League (AL) has asked ambassadors of Arab
countries to the United Nations to draft a resolution to be submitted to the
Security Council, the Palestinian Foreign Ministry said on Sunday in a
statement.
However, Olmert and his ministers have ignored the
international reaction, describing their operations in Gaza as unblamable.
Cabinet minister Yitzhak Herzog said: "Anybody who
calls this operation disproportionate has no clue about the facts on the ground.
We have been attacked and bombarded for months and weeks."
"With all due respect to all those who criticize us,
if anything of this nature had happened in their homeland, they would have acted
much worse," the minister said. Enditem