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WAR REPORT
In Gaza, war clouds Palestinian teen's dream of peace
by Staff Writers
Gaza City, Palestinian Territories (AFP) July 13, 2014


Two Gaza rockets shot down over Tel Aviv: army
Tel Aviv (AFP) July 13, 2014 - Two Gaza rockets were shot down over the greater Tel Aviv area by the Iron Dome anti-missile system Sunday, the army said, after at least three explosions shook the area.

"Iron Dome intercepted two rockets over the Tel Aviv metropolitan area," the army said, several hours after another two rockets were intercepted over Lod, very close to Israel's main international airport.

Hamas to blame for civilian dead in Gaza: Netanyahu
Washington (AFP) July 13, 2014 - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday Hamas was to blame for all civilian casualties in Gaza, as he defended Israel's use of air strikes to counter rocket attacks from the territory.

Despite international calls for a ceasefire, Netanyahu told American television audiences Israel would not quit until it had achieved "sustainable quiet and security for our people."

"We use whatever means are necessary to defend our people, as would the United States or any other government faced with such a predicament," he said on CBS's Face the Nation, when asked whether Israeli ground forces would go into Gaza.

Netanyahu's defense of Israeli tactics came as the toll from Israeli air strikes in Gaza rose to 162, and after the UN Security Council on Saturday urged both sides to end the hostilities.

Netanyahu argued, however, that Hamas was to blame for any civilian casualties because it was embedding rockets and command posts "in homes, hospitals, next to kindergartens, mosques."

"So naturally, they are responsible for all the civilian deaths that occur accidentally," he said. "We're sorry for any accidental civilian deaths, but it's the Hamas that bears complete responsibility for such civilian casualties."

In 2012, Mohamed Abu Aisha took part in a US peace camp with Israelis, but now he wonders if some of them are flying the warplanes overhead in Gaza.

Standing in the Tuffah neighbourhood in eastern Gaza City, the 17-year-old stares at the devastation left by an Israeli strike in which 18 people were killed on Saturday night.

The target appears to have been a Hamas police chief, but the missile killed a significant number of his extended family, with two rockets slamming into the home of a cousin he was visiting shortly after Ramadan prayers.

"It is a disaster," says Abu Aisha, who lives two streets away.

"The blast was so big that our house shook. All the dust and debris came in through our windows -- we can't close them because otherwise they shatter when there are air strikes."

Abu Aisha just graduated from Gaza's American International School and is eager to show off his fluent English.

He honed his language skills during two months in the United States in 2012, when he took part in a peacemaker's programme with Israelis and others living in conflict zones, called Seeds of Peace.

"It's a programme that brings people living in conflict together and allows them to talk to each other," he says.

It was the first time he had talked at length to Israelis, and he formed cautious acquaintances with some, as he tried to explain things from the Palestinian point of view.

He stayed in touch with them, but recently discovered that some have begun their mandatory military service.

"These people are in the army, maybe some are in the airforce," he says.

"I look around and I wonder if the people I met are now the ones that are bombing us."

- A step too far -

Since the Israeli air strikes began on Tuesday, Abu Aisha has stopped contacting the Israelis he met.

And he sighs in frustration when he talks about those who are now in the military.

"I am disappointed in them. I expected and I hoped that they might refuse to enter the army, but now they are part of that criminal force," he says.

All around him is the detritus of the family killed in Saturday's strike, one of more than 1,300 Israeli raids that have killed 166 people in just six days.

The blast levelled the building and sheared the facade off a neighbouring structure, exposing a kitchen and a fridge with its door ripped off, full of food and drink.

A nearby UN school also bears scars from the strike -- all the windows blown out and a large hole blasted through its outside wall.

On the ground are children's notebooks, a woman's high-heeled shoe, a purple nightgown, even an x-ray.

On a nearby piece of land, 17 graves have been dug to receive some of those killed in the blast.

A photo of the family patriarch Majed al-Batsh lies on a yellow blanket covering some of his body parts, as well as parts belonging to other family members.

The dead are buried in chaos, with mourners crowding around the row of graves.

One body is lowered in, then removed, rotated, and lowered in again to ensure it is facing the right direction.

- 'I want to help' -

Standing near the remains of one of the rockets that hit the Batsh house, Abu Aisha says he is hoping to become a doctor.

He has finished high school and now hopes to travel to Turkey to study medicine.

"The level of medicine here and the medical knowledge is so low," he says.

"So I want to study it so I can help my country."

With the prospect of peace looking increasingly like a pipedream, Abu Aisha can imagine himself one day working in Gaza City's Shifa hospital, treating those hurt in future conflicts.

"I expect the coming decades will be full of wars here, so we will need people who can help people," he told AFP.

"That is what I want to do."

.


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