UNITED NATIONS -- France stepped up its push for a ceasefire in Gaza by drafting a UN Security Council resolution on Monday demanding a truce but Israel vowed to continue military action until Hamas stops firing rockets.
Discussions between French, Arab and other Western UN delegations at the United Nations intensified as Israeli forces continued to pound Gaza in an offensive to halt Hamas rocket fire against southern Israel from the Palestinian territory.
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France's President Nicolas Sarkozy, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, EU Foreign Policy Chief Javier Solana and Czech Republic Foreign Affairs Minister Karel Schwarzenberg (L-R) attend a news conference in the West Bank city of Ramallah January 5, 2009. [Agencies]
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Diplomats said the French draft resolution would include elements that Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad al-Malki and Arab League chief Amr Moussa described after meeting with Arab ministers and diplomats -- and UN officials -- in New York.
Malki told reporters that Arab countries wanted a resolution demanding an immediate end to "Israeli aggression" in Gaza and calling for the deployment of international monitors who would police any ceasefire agreement.
Moussa also said the Arabs did not want to explicitly condemn Hamas militants, whose rocket attacks Israel and the United States say sparked the present crisis.
Ambassador Jean-Maurice Ripert of France, the current Security Council president, said, "We will do our best to have a resolution as soon as possible, and as soon as feasible."
Israel rejects the idea of observers in Gaza but European diplomats say the Jewish state can be persuaded to accept it.
The Israeli army launched an attack on Hamas positions in Gaza last month after the group ended a six-month ceasefire.
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner and British Foreign Secretary David Miliband are among Western officials attending a special council session on Gaza on Tuesday, along with some half a dozen Arab ministers, UN diplomats said.