- Back to Home »
- Gaza conflict: UN accuses Israel over Jabaliya attack
Wednesday, 30 July 2014
Gaza conflict: UN accuses Israel over Jabaliya attack
Israel attacked a UN-run school housing refugees in Gaza despite warnings that civilians were there, the UN has said.
UN spokesman Chris Gunness said "the world stands disgraced" by the attack, in which 15 died and dozens were hurt.The Israeli military said an initial inquiry suggested soldiers responded to mortar fire. The military says it is now holding a partial, four-hour humanitarian ceasefire.
Some 1,200 Palestinians and 55 Israelis have been killed in the conflict.
Most of the Palestinian deaths have been civilians.
Fifty-three Israeli soldiers have been killed along with two civilians. A Thai worker in Israel has also died.
Israel launched its offensive in Gaza after a surge in rocket fire from the territory.
Peter Lerner of the Israel Defense Forces: ''We do not target UN facilities''
The current conflict is now the longest between Israel and militants from Gaza.
A 2012 offensive lasted for eight days, and the 2008 conflict went on for 22 days.
"The last time was hours before the fatal attack," he said.
"Our initial assessment is that it was Israeli artillery that hit our school."
Chris Gunness: "Children were killed as they slept next to their parents"
Images from the school showed large holes in the walls and roof.
Bob Turner, UNRWA's Gaza director, said the UN was "confident" Israel was responsible.
He said UN workers had collected fragments of projectiles that suggested they were artillery shells fired from Israeli positions to the north-east of the school.
The BBC's Orla Guerin was given access by the Israeli military to a tunnel they say was used by Palestinian militants
It said in a statement that its "initial inquiry suggests that militants fired mortars earlier this morning from the vicinity of UNRWA school in Jabaliya".
It said soldiers "responded by firing towards the origin of fire".
The military later said a ceasefire would be in force between 15:00 (12:00 GMT) and 19:00.
However, it would only apply to areas where Israeli soldiers were not currently operating and residents were warned not to return to areas they had previously been asked to evacuate.
Lt Col Peter Lerner of the IDF told the BBC: "I hope that Hamas will hold their fire as well, because otherwise things are going to get messier."
"The lull which Israel announced is media exploitation and has no value because it excludes the volatile areas along the border, and we won't be able to get the wounded out from those areas," he said in a statement reported by Agence France-Presse.
Israel has repeatedly accused Hamas of using schools and civilian areas as bases to launch attacks.
Last week, another UN-run school was hit, with Palestinians saying at least 15 people were killed.
But the Israeli military denied the killings, saying a single "errant" shell had landed in an empty courtyard.
In other developments:
- The UN on Tuesday revealed that a cache of rockets had been found at one of its schools in Gaza - the third case of its kind - and condemned it as a "yet another flagrant violation of the neutrality of our premises"
- A monthly opinion poll of about 600 Israeli Jews by Tel Aviv University suggests 97% support the current military operation
- A baby who was born after her mother was killed in Gaza, making headlines around the world, has died
But the Israeli military said rockets continued to land in Israel from Gaza.
Palestinian officials said Gaza's port had been destroyed on Tuesday and its only power plant had been put out of action.
Meanwhile, Palestinian factions Hamas, Fatah and Islamic Jihad are expected to meet in Cairo later to discuss a ceasefire.
