A photo allegedly showing Israelis eating popcorn and cheering as they watch the bombing of Gaza has sparked outrage online. |
The photo was posted online by a Danish
journalist, Allan Sørensen, the Middle East Correspondent for a Danish
newspaper.
Sørensen captioned the photo; 'Sderot cinema:
Israelis bringing chairs 2 hilltop in sderot 2 watch latest from Gaza. Clapping
when blasts are heard'.
The photo has been retweeted more than 9,000 times
on social media network Twitter which journalist Sørensen has been updating
frequently.
Meanwhile, the Israeli military says it is
ordering Palestinians living in the northern Gaza Strip to evacuate the area
"for their own safety".
In a statement, the military said it would send
messages to residents overnight to leave the area.
Brigadier General Motti Almoz, the chief military
spokesman, said Israel planned to hit the area with heavy force in the next 24
hours as it steps up an offensive against Gaza militants.
It comes as Israel widens its air assault against
the Gaza Strip's rulers, hitting a mosque, Hamas-affiliated charities and an
Islamic home for the disabled, as Palestinians said the death toll from the
five-day offensive had risen to 135.
While Israel vowed to press forward with its
five-day-old campaign, it found itself facing growing international calls to
stop.
An official earlier said the goal of the operation
is to restore quiet to Israel for a continuous period. "This goal will be
achieved whether it is done militarily or diplomatically. Israel will consider
any suggestion that will bring the accomplishment of this goal," the
official said.
Ximena Silva from Chile at the Ireland Palestine Solidarity campaign protest at the GPO. Picture; GERRY MOONEY. |
The military said it had struck more than 1,100
targets, including Hamas rocket launchers, command centres and weapon
manufacturing and storage facilities, in a bid to stop relentless rocket fire
coming from Gaza. Officials in the territory said two women were killed in the
attack on the disability centre.
The central Gaza mosque was being used to conceal
rockets like those militants have fired nearly 700 times towards Israel over
the past five days, the military said. However, the strikes in the densely
populated Gaza Strip show the challenge Israel faces as it considers a ground
operation that could potentially pose further dangers to civilians.
Gaza Health Ministry spokesman Ashraf al-Kidra said
Israeli strikes had raised the death toll there to 135, with more than 920
wounded. Among the dead was a nephew of Ismail Haniyeh, a senior Hamas leader,
who was killed in an air strike near his home, Hamas officials said.
Hamas militants have been hit hard but dozens of
the dead have been civilians. Israel has also demolished dozens of homes it
says are used by Hamas for military purposes.
Hamas said it hoped the mosque attack would
galvanise support for it in the Muslim world.
"(It) shows how barbaric this enemy is and
how much it is hostile to Islam," said Husam Badran, a Hamas spokesman in
Doha, Qatar. "This terrorism gives us the right to broaden our response to
deter this occupier."
Medical officials in the Gaza Strip later said 15
people were killed in an air strike on a target near a mosque.
Mr al-Kidra said the attack took place as people
were ending evening prayers at the mosque.
It was not clear what the target was, in what was
the deadliest single air strike during Israel's current offensive in Gaza.
Source - independent.ie
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