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Sunday, July 13, 2014

Palestinians Flee Northern Gaza as a Cease-Fire Appears Elusive


Palestinians fled their homes Sunday to seek shelter at a United Nations school in Gaza City.CreditMohammed Saber/European Pressphoto Agency

GAZA CITY — Several thousand Palestinians, defying the urging of Hamas to remain in their homes, fled areas in northern Gaza early Sunday after Israel warned them through fliers and phone calls of major attacks to come.
Israel and Hamas seemed to signal little public interest in international appeals for a cease-fire as they continued their barrages. More than 130 rockets were fired out of Gaza into Israel on Sunday, with 22 intercepted, the Israeli Army said, while Palestinians expressed anger over the previous day’s Israeli strikes on a center for people with disabilities and on a home in an attack that killed 17 members of one extended family.
Early Monday, Israel also exchanged volleys with Lebanon, to the north, shelling it in response to a cross-border rocket attack, one of a string in recent days, Reuters reported. There was no word on damage or casualties.
Those fleeing northern Gaza traveled in vehicles, in donkey carts and on foot. Some waving white flags, residents of areas around Beit Lahiya ventured south to seek shelter in United Nations-run schools, cramming into classrooms and piling desks out on balconies.
Photo
Israeli soldiers sleeping in an army deployment area near Israel’s border with the Gaza Strip.CreditJack Guez/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Rafik Said al-Sultan, 44, walked two hours to a school here with his extended family, carrying the youngest of his nine children. “We left because of the terrifying bombing in the night and because of the fliers that warned that any moving body after noon will be struck,” he said.
The leaflets warned residents in the north to evacuate before what Israel’s military spokesman described as a “short and temporary” campaign against rocket launchers there. Hamas, which controls Gaza, asked residents to stay in their homes and ignore “Israeli propaganda,” but many fled anyway.
Mr. Sultan looked over at the young woman next to him and said: “I don’t need another tragedy. This is the fiancée of my son.” Three days ago, the son, Odai, 21, was killed in an Israeli rocket strike on the taxi he was driving. Mr. Sultan said that he had no idea why it had been attacked, and that it must have been the wrong car.
Isra Abbas, the fiancée, 17, was to marry Odai in September. “The 1948 Nakba is now happening every four years,” she said angrily, referring to the Palestinian exodus, known as “the catastrophe,” during the Arab-Israeli war.
“We pray to God there will be a truce, for our children and ourselves,” Mr. Sultan said, looking around the crowded classroom. “We can’t live here. There are no beds and few bathrooms, and men and women are here together.”
Down the hall, his nephew Muhammad al-Sultan, 26, had come with his wife and two young daughters on a donkey cart early in the morning after air attacks on his farmland. He conceded that many rockets were fired toward Israel from the area around Beit Lahiya. “Many rockets go from there,” he said. “But Israel lands more on us.”

The assistant principal of the school arrived early Sunday morning, and the courtyard was already full of refugees, she said. “It was a shock,” she said, estimating that for the 31 classrooms she had about 1,000 people. The principal, who said she had to turn one family away because the place was full, said she could not be quoted by name without United Nations permission.
According to Christopher Gunness, the spokesman for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, or Unrwa, which deals with the refugees and operates the school, about 17,000 displaced people were already sheltering in 20 Unrwa buildings.

Major Strikes So Far

Here are approximate locations of 19 major airstrikes that resulted in deaths since Israel began its air campaign on Tuesday. The Israeli military says it has struck more than 1,100 targets since it started the operation in response to waves of rockets being fired from Gaza.
Nations (map)

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