Israeli troops divide Gaza in two as incursion continues

By DPA,

Tel Aviv/Gaza : Israeli troops pushed further into the Gaza Strip Sunday, battling Palestinian gunmen and cutting the enclave in two as they deployed south of Gaza City and seized control of a major road.


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An Israeli military spokesman said one soldier was killed and 31 wounded since the army first moved into the Gaza Strip Saturday night.

The Israeli military spokesman dismissed as a “complete lie” militants claims that they had killed nine Israeli soldiers. A senior Israeli military official said reports that an Israeli soldier had been captured by the militants was “untrue”.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that most of the resistance the Israelis had encountered so far came from mortars, although other Israeli spokesmen said close-quarters combat has taken place.

“We are operating in a very challenging area that has been well- prepared by Hamas in order to repel attacks,” the official said.

According to the Israeli media, Hamas can call on 16,000 armed fighters, and the organization’s arsenal includes 4,000 rocket- propelled grenade launchers, 120 tonnes of explosives, and dozens of 120mm mortars.

Residents of the Strip said more than half of the enclave appeared to be occupied by the Israelis, who were taking up positions outside major towns, and were avoiding entering densely-populated areas.

Gaza City was a virtual ghost town Sunday, with shops closed and most people huddled indoors.

Backing up the ground forces, the Israeli air force continued its attacks, hitting over 45 targets overnight and Sunday, including tunnels, weapons storage facilities, mortar shell launching squads and a number of mortar shell launching areas, a statement by the Israeli military said. The air force also provided close support to the troops on the ground, a military spokeswoman said Sunday night.

One of the raids also killed two senior Hamas militants: Hussam Hamdan, held responsible for the firing of long-range Grad missiles toward the southern Israeli cities of Beersheba and Ofakim, and Mohammed Hilo, who was in charge of Hamas “special forces” in Khan Younis.

The Israeli Navy also attacked several targets including the Hamas intelligence headquarters in Gaza City, rocket launching areas and Hamas marine forces outposts, the statement added.

The Israeli official said that although the Israeli ground incursion was proceeding as planned, it would not be a rapid operation that would end in days.

He said Israel was not seeking to recapture the entire Strip, but wanted to decrease the number of rockets fired from the Strip at Israel, and would thus remain in the areas which are operational at present.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert told ministers at the start of Sunday’s cabinet meeting in Tel Aviv that the Israeli assault was “unavoidable” and was part of the overall operation designed to “create a new security reality” for residents of southern Israel.

But militias in the Strip continued to rocket Israel, firing both short-range and long-range missiles at various cities, although the approximately 40 rockets launched by mid-afternoon was fewer than Israeli analysts had predicted would be fired once the ground assault got under way. There were no reports of fatalities from the day’s rocket attacks.

The Israeli ground operation got under way Saturday evening as infantry and armour, backed by combat engineers and with air support, crossed into the salient after an artillery barrage lasting hours.

Palestinian militants immediately confronted the Israelis, sparking what the Islamic Hamas movement, which controls Gaza, said in a statement were “heavy and tough exchanges of fire and armed clashes.”

Reports from inside the Strip described explosions, heavy machine- gun fire and shelling by Israeli tanks. The bombing campaign continued overnight, and television footage from Gaza showed fires and billowing smoke.

The Israeli military said the ground operation was the second stage of the Israeli offensive, which began Dec 27, and was intended to destroy Hamas installations in the area of operations and to impede militants’ firing of rockets at Israel.

Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak warned in a televised statement Saturday night that the ground campaign would be neither easy nor short.

Israel launched its “Operation Cast Lead” in response to a week of heavy rocket barrages on the Jewish state from the Gaza Strip, following the end of a shaky six-month truce between Israel and Hamas leaders in the territory.

At least 520 Palestinians have been killed since the operation began, and around 2,500 wounded.

The hundreds of Palestinian rockets and mortars launched since the start of the operation have killed four Israelis, three of them civilians, and wounded dozens more.

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