Israel rebuffs U.N. ceasefire calls
GAZA (Reuters) - Israel rejected a U.N. resolution calling for a cease-fire in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip on Friday and warplanes and tanks pounded the Palestinian enclave.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert dismissed Thursday's binding Security Council resolution demanding an "immediate and durable" cease-fire in the two-week-old war as "unworkable."
Israel said Hamas fighters had fired at least 30 rockets into its territory on Friday. No casualties were reported.
Medics in Gaza said the Palestinian death toll had risen to 784. Ten Israeli soldiers have been killed, as well as three civilians hit by Hamas cross-border rocket fire.
Hamas officials in Gaza say they are weighing the U.N. resolution, but have voiced irritation they were not consulted.
The group said it had sent three of its leaders from Gaza to Cairo to discuss a separate Egyptian cease-fire proposal, but diplomats said Israel and Egypt were far apart on the plan.
"The firing of rockets this morning only goes to show that the U.N. decision is unworkable and will not be adhered to by the murderous Palestinian organisations," Olmert declared.
Israel's security cabinet debated for the second time in three days whether to send in reservists for a push into the Gaza Strip's towns and cities. There was no word on the outcome. Continued...







