Gaza City (Palestinian
Territories) (AFP) - Five Palestinians and an Italian journalist were
killed in Gaza Wednesday when Israeli ordnance detonated as experts
tried to disable it just hours before the end of a 72-hour truce.
The blast
occurred in the northern town of Beit Lahiya as Egyptian mediators
scrambled to persuade Israeli and Palestinian negotiators to extend a
three-day ceasefire, which expires at midnight (2100 GMT).
Without
agreement on an extension or a long-term truce, the two sides risk a
resumption of the deadly fighting, which began on July 8.
The
Associated Press confirmed that one of its journalists and a freelance
Palestinian translator had been killed in the blast, identifying them as
Simone Camilli, a 35-year-old cameraman from Italy, and Ali Shehda Abu
Afash, 36.
Besides his work
as a translator, Abu Afash also worked part-time as an administrative
assistant with AFP's Gaza bureau. He leaves behind a wife and two girls,
aged seven and two.
Camilli, who is survived by a wife and three-year-old daughter, had worked for The Associated Press since 2005.
Both men were killed as
they covered the story of experts dismantling unexploded ordnance. One
of AP's Palestinian photographers, Hatem Moussa, was also badly wounded
in the explosion along with another four people, medics said.
The Gaza interior ministry said its top bomb disposal expert in the north had been killed, naming him as Taysir Lahum.
Camilli
is the first foreign journalist die in the violence in Gaza, which has
killed more than 1,950 Palestinians and 67 on the Israeli side.
- Deadline looms -
As
the night fell on three days of calm in and around Gaza and with no
concrete word on the talks in Cairo, both sides were readying for a
possible resumption of hostilities as the midnight deadline drew closer.
"We have already sacrified 64
men and it is possible we may have to sacrifice more," Israel's Chief of
Staff Lieutenant General Benny Gantz said at a military ceremony on
Wednesday evening, his remarks broadcast on army radio.
"It is possible that the operation is not ended and is not completed," he said.
And on the ground in Gaza, many were concerned that violence would resume.
"We're
all worried, it's natural," said Hussein Abu Haseera, sitting outside
his air conditioning shop in Gaza City's Rimal neighbourhood.
"We want this to be finished, for the blockade to be lifted. No one likes dying do they?"
In Cairo, the truce talks at the
General Intelligence headquarters were expected to run until late as
Egyptian mediators raced to bridge the gaps between the two sides.
By
the time the deadline passes, the two sides must have agreed on a
permanent ceasefire, accepted an extension of the truce or risk a
resumption of more than a month of bloody fighting.
A
member of the Palestinian delegation told AFP there would be an
official announcement by their negotiating team at 9:30pm (1830 GMT).
Ahead
of the announcement, Ismail Haniya, the top Hamas official in Gaza
insisted that a longterm ceasefire would only be achieved if Israel
lifted its eight-year blockade, the Islamist movement's Al Aqsa TV
quoted reported.
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