Israel's bombardment of Gaza has seen entire areas of Gaza
destroyed
As international pressure for a ceasefire grows, Israel and Hamas have each reiterated their positions and aims. Israel has mourned the deaths of five soldiers killed by Hamas militants that emerged from an underground tunnel.
"We don't accept any condition of ceasefire," the Associated Press quoted Hamas commander Mohammad Deif as saying. "There is no ceasefire until the end of the aggression and the end of the siege."
Israel and Egypt have imposed a blockade on Gaza restricted the entry of goods since 2007. The recording of Mohammad Deif's statement emerged at the same time as a Hamas video of militants using a tunnel to attack an Israeli soldier. Israel insists the existence of such tunnels - which it says are designed to be used to attack Israelis inside Israel - are the key reason for pressing ahead with Operation Protective Edge.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) want to continue operations to destroy the tunnels once any ceasefire is agreed. Earlier in the day a senior figure in the West Bank, Yasser Abed Rabbo, said a ceasefire was imminent and claimed to speak for Hamas. But a spokesman for the group quickly denied that.
Infrastructure hit
There were reports of ongoing shelling in Gaza after dark, hours after a series of targets linked to Hamas were hit by presumed Israeli bombardments. Earlier, a huge plume of smoke rose over the Strip's only power plant after one of its fuel tanks was reportedly set alight by Israeli tank shells, and the facility was forced to shut down.The main power station could be out of action for up to a year, the facility's manager said, after it burst into flames
Hamas-run TV and radio stations, three mosques, four factories and government buildings were also hit, according to reports. Palestinian security sources said that Gaza's port had been destroyed, with two schools and a kindergarten also hit. Some 110 targets were hit on Tuesday, Israel said. Palestinians said seven families were among the more than 100 killed.
The UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) said it was now caring for more than 200,000 people in shelters, and revealed that a number of its staff had been reported killed. Fifty-five houses were destroyed in bombing on Monday night, leaving people buried under rubble .
Rockets fired from Gaza continued to hit Israel on Tuesday. The Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepted four over the southern city of Beersheva, Israeli media reported. Sirens sounded in Tel Aviv and several other towns.
An Israeli soldier prays on top of a tank near the
Gaza border
Israel's Operation Protective Edge began on 8 July after a surge in militant
rocket attacks.
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