Nasser al-Bor'i holds the body of his six-month-old son, Mohammed, outside the morgue at the Shifa Hospital in Gaza City. (Wissam Nassar/MaanImages) |
You know, I was going to apologize for my language and anger earlier, but not now.
I already said I wouldn't hold a grudge if Israel just stopped this, but they don't, so I'm not going to stop condemning them with my spew.
Until the Israeli government begins behaving like members of planet Earth, they will get nothing but condemning vitriol from me.
"Israeli air strike kills 4 more Palestinian children"
"Twenty-five Palestinians in Gaza killed in 48 hours
---
Related
Israeli missiles silence baby's laughter in Gaza, 28 February 2008
Gaza medical center damaged in Israeli air strike
---
Last Updated: Thursday, 28 February 2008, 16:37 GMT
Four children die in Gaza strike | ||||||
Reports say they were playing near the Jabaliya refugee camp. Israel said it had targeted a rocket-launching cell. Later, a Hamas militant was killed in an Israeli air strike near Beit Hanoun and a security post near the house of Hamas leader Ismail Haniya was hit. On Wednesday, a rocket fired by Hamas killed an Israeli student near Sderot, the first such death in nine months. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said "terrorists" in the territory would pay a very heavy price for the attacks. The US Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, said that the Palestinian rocket attacks "need to stop". Ms Rice will visit the Middle East next week for talks with Mr Olmert and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has separately expressed "deep concern" at the escalation of violence in which at least 22 Palestinians have been killed in the last two days. 'Continuous crimes' A string of Israeli air raids targeted Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip on Thursday. In the afternoon, four boys reportedly aged between eight and 15 were killed whilst playing football near the al-Salam mosque in Jabaliya. Three of them were members of the same family, according to the Palestinian news agency Maan. An Israeli army spokeswoman told the AFP news agency it had launched "several strikes that targeted and hit rocket-launching cells" in the area. Shortly afterwards, a separate Israeli strike in nearby Beit Hanoun killed a member of Hamas' military wing, Izzedine al-Qassam Brigades, medics said. A Hamas security post 150m from the home of the former Palestinian Prime Minister, Ismail Haniya, was also attacked by an Israeli helicopter, wounding several people, officials said. Hamas said Mr Haniya had not been in the area at the time and his home was not damaged. After his office was bombed on Wednesday, Mr Haniya condemned what he called "continuous crimes" by Israel. Earlier on Thursday, Hamza al-Haya, son of a prominent hardline leader in the Gaza Strip, Khalil al-Haya, was killed along with a fellow militant. Palestinian witnesses said the interior ministry building, run by the militant group Hamas, was hit on Wednesday evening. The building was empty. Nearby buildings were caught in the blast, killing a baby and wounding at about 30 other people, Palestinian medical officials said. Most of the other recent Palestinian fatalities have been militants, including five Hamas members killed in an air strike in Khan Younis on Wednesday morning. Another two were killed by Israeli troops in the Balata refugee camp. One of Hamas's rockets exploded in a car park at Sapir College in Sderot late on Wednesday afternoon, killing an Israeli 47-year-old studying at the college. Although the Israeli fatality was the first caused by rocket fire in nine months, four other Israelis have been killed in attacks by Palestinian militants since the relaunching of peace talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority. In that time, more than 200 Palestinians have been killed by the Israeli military. |