Israel bombarded Islamic Jihad positions in the Gaza Strip for a third day Sunday as violence escalated, with 31 Palestinians reported dead and militants firing their first rockets at Jerusalem.
Six children were among those killed in the latest âIsraeli aggressionâ since Friday, and 265 people have been wounded, said health authorities in the Islamist-run enclave where several buildings were reduced to rubble.
The fighting is the worst in Gaza since a war last year devastated the impoverished coastal territory, home to some 2.3 million Palestinians, and forced Israelis to seek shelter from rockets.
Israel pressed on with its aerial and artillery bombardment of positions of Islamic Jihad, an Iran-backed group designated as a terrorist organisation by several Western nations, as the group has fired over 500 rockets in return.
The Israeli army has said the entire âsenior leadership of the military wing of the Islamic Jihad in Gaza has been neutralisedâ, and Prime Minister Yair Lapid vowed Sunday that âthe operation will continue as long as necessaryâ.
In Gaza, run by the Islamist group Hamas â who said Sunday they were âunitedâ with Islamic Jihad, but have not joined the fray â the ministry said 31 people had died since the start of Israelâs âOperation Breaking Dawnâ.
Israel said it had âirrefutableâ evidence that a stray rocket fired by Islamic Jihad was responsible for the deaths of several children in Jabalia, northern Gaza, on Saturday.
It was not immediately clear how many children were killed there, but an AFP photographer saw six dead bodies at the local hospital, including three minors.
âWe were sitting in the street and suddenly we saw an explosion,â said Muhammad Abu Sadaa, describing the devastation in Jabalia.
âWe came running to the place and found body parts lying on the ground⊠they were torn-apart children.â
Leaders targeted
The army said it had struck 139 Islamic Jihad positions, with the militants firing 470 rockets that had crossed into Israel, while another 115 rockets fired from Gaza fell inside the enclave.
Al Quds Brigades, the Islamic Jihadâs military wing, said it had âfired rocketsâ at Jerusalem, where sirens wailed and explosions were heard as the army shot them down.
In total, Israel said its Iron Dome air defence system had intercepted some 185 rockets, with a success rate of 97 percent of projectiles targeted.
Jews in Israel-annexed east Jerusalem meanwhile marked the Tisha Beâav fasting day Sunday at the Al Aqsa mosque compound, known in Judaism as the Temple Mount, where some Palestinians shouted âGod is greatestâ in response.
Tensions there have previously sparked wider violence â with Hamasâs Doha-based chief Ismail Haniyeh warning of the risk of an âuncontrollableâ security crisis.
An AFP photographer was briefly detained by Israeli police, amid a heavy security deployment, but wider commemorations passed off without major incident.
Israel has said it was necessary to launch a âpre-emptiveâ operation against Islamic Jihad, as the group was planning an imminent attack.
âWhoever seeks to hurt Israeli citizens will be hurt,â said Defence Minister Benny Gantz.
Egyptâs President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has said Cairo was talking with both sides âaround the clockâ to ease the violence, but Gantz said strikes would continue âuntil we restore quiet and remove the threatsâ.
Israelâs army has reported killing senior leaders of Islamic Jihad in Gaza, including Taysir al-Jabari in Gaza City and Khaled Mansour in Rafah in the south, as well as the arrest of 20 members in the West Bank.
Israelâs Lapid called the killing of Mansour an âextraordinary achievementâ.
âWe are all aloneâ
Daily life in the Gaza strip has come to a standstill, with the sole power station shut down due to a lack of fuel after Israel closed its border crossings.
Gazaâs health ministry said the next few hours will be âcrucial and difficultâ, warning that without electricity it soon risked suspending vital services.
In Gaza City, resident Dounia Ismail said the Israeli bombardment âbrings back images of fear, anxiety and the feeling that we are all aloneâ.
Civilians in southern and central Israel, meanwhile, were forced into air raid shelters, with two people hospitalised with shrapnel wounds and 13 others lightly hurt while running for safety, the Magen David Adom emergency service said.
âItâs tense, itâs frightening,â said Beverly Jamil, a resident of Ashkelon close to Gaza, who has been rushing repeatedly to her air raid shelter.
âAshkelonâs a ghost town â itâs a holiday, kids should be out playing.â
Meanwhile, the response of Hamas to the violence remains critical, with spokesman Fawzi Barhoum offering the groupâs support to Islamic Jihad on Sunday, but stopping short of saying they would take part.
Islamic Jihad is aligned with Hamas but often acts independently. Hamas has fought four wars with Israel since seizing control of Gaza in 2007, including the conflict last May.
âThe resistance in all its military wings and factions are united in this battle,â Barhoum said.