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Gaza awaits cease-fire talks
HUNDREDS of embattled Palestinians ventured outside to shop for food yesterday during a three-hour Gaza truce, a first step toward an Egyptian-proposed cease-fire that was under discussion by Israel and the militant group Hamas.
"Food and milk - what else can we hope for in three hours," said Ahmed Abu Kamel, a father of six who lives near the city of Gaza. "We want it all to end."
Violence resumed in the area soon after the 1-4pm truce expired, and Palestinians returned to the precarious safety of their home after stocking up on food and visiting family and friends.
Israel said it would stop attacks in the Gaza Strip during those hours every day to ease the flow of aid to the territory's 1.5 million residents.
A day after Israeli shelling killed 42 Palestinians at a UN-run Gaza school, Israel said it viewed "positively" talks with Cairo over a wider cease-fire plan promoted by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and French leader Nicolas Sarkozy.
"We welcome the French-Egyptian initiative. We want to see it succeed," said Mark Regev, spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, whose security Cabinet decided to delay a decision on expanding the 12-day-old Gaza offensive.
Israel wants a cease-fire deal to include a specialized international force to search out and destroy tunnels along the border between Gaza and Egypt to prevent Hamas from rearming and firing more rockets at Israeli towns.
A Palestinian official said the Gaza Strip's Hamas rulers, who want an end to Israel's blockade of the enclave, had been briefed in Egypt by Mubarak and were debating the proposal.
"Aggression must stop, the siege must be lifted, and the Zionist forces must pull out, and then we can talk about others issues, including calm and rockets," Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum told journalists.
In fresh fighting, at least 12 Palestinians were killed by Israeli attacks, medical workers said. At least 15 Hamas rockets hit southern Israel, causing no casualties.
The total Palestinian death toll reached 650, medical officials said. Israel says it killed dozens of militants this week in the offensive it launched on December 27 with the declared aim of silencing rocket salvoes.
According to UN figures, more than a quarter of the Palestinian dead are civilians. Seven Israeli soldiers and three civilians have been killed.
"Food and milk - what else can we hope for in three hours," said Ahmed Abu Kamel, a father of six who lives near the city of Gaza. "We want it all to end."
Violence resumed in the area soon after the 1-4pm truce expired, and Palestinians returned to the precarious safety of their home after stocking up on food and visiting family and friends.
Israel said it would stop attacks in the Gaza Strip during those hours every day to ease the flow of aid to the territory's 1.5 million residents.
A day after Israeli shelling killed 42 Palestinians at a UN-run Gaza school, Israel said it viewed "positively" talks with Cairo over a wider cease-fire plan promoted by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and French leader Nicolas Sarkozy.
"We welcome the French-Egyptian initiative. We want to see it succeed," said Mark Regev, spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, whose security Cabinet decided to delay a decision on expanding the 12-day-old Gaza offensive.
Israel wants a cease-fire deal to include a specialized international force to search out and destroy tunnels along the border between Gaza and Egypt to prevent Hamas from rearming and firing more rockets at Israeli towns.
A Palestinian official said the Gaza Strip's Hamas rulers, who want an end to Israel's blockade of the enclave, had been briefed in Egypt by Mubarak and were debating the proposal.
"Aggression must stop, the siege must be lifted, and the Zionist forces must pull out, and then we can talk about others issues, including calm and rockets," Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum told journalists.
In fresh fighting, at least 12 Palestinians were killed by Israeli attacks, medical workers said. At least 15 Hamas rockets hit southern Israel, causing no casualties.
The total Palestinian death toll reached 650, medical officials said. Israel says it killed dozens of militants this week in the offensive it launched on December 27 with the declared aim of silencing rocket salvoes.
According to UN figures, more than a quarter of the Palestinian dead are civilians. Seven Israeli soldiers and three civilians have been killed.
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