WORLD> Middle East
Israeli ground forces enter Gaza in escalation
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-01-04 07:56

Resident Abed al-Ghoul said the Israeli army called by phone to tell them to leave the house within 15 minutes.

Smoke rises during an Israeli air strike on the northern Gaza Strip January 3, 2009. Israeli artillery shelled the Gaza Strip on Saturday, stepping up the offensive against Hamas militants in the Palestinian enclave as tanks and troops waited on the border for a possible ground offensive. Earlier in the day Israel bombed Gaza from the air and sea, killing a senior Hamas commander. Hamas meanwhile kept up its rocket attacks on southern Israeli towns in defiance of international calls for it to cease such actions. [Agencies]

Palestinian militants kept up their fire as well, launching 29 rockets into Israel Saturday, hitting four houses and lightly wounding three people.

One rocket scored a direct hit on a house in the southern city of Ashkelon and another struck a bomb shelter there, leaving its above-ground entrance scarred by shrapnel and blasting a parked bus.

The ground operation sidelined intense international diplomacy to try to reach a truce. French President Nicolas Sarkozy was the visit the region next week, and US President George W. Bush and UN chief Ban Ki-moon both spoke in favor of an internationally monitored truce.

Israel has already said it wants international monitors. It is unclear whether Hamas would agree to such supervision, which could limit its control of Gaza. Hamas has ruled the area since seizing control in June 2007.

In Hamas' first reaction to the proposal for international monitors, government spokesman Taher Nunu said early Saturday that the group would not allow Israel or the international community to impose any arrangement, though he left the door open to a negotiated solution.

"Anyone who thinks that the change in the Palestinian arena can be achieved through jet fighters' bombs and tanks and without dialogue is mistaken," he said.