- WARNING GRAPHIC CONTENT: Palestinian death toll reaches 1,050 as scores of bodies are pulled from the rubble
- Those killed included 18 members of the same family who died in village near Khan Younis, southern Gaza
- Tense halt in fighting began at 6am UK time yesterday but Israel will continue searching for tunnels
- World leaders gather in Paris for crisis talks as 1,500 riot police prepare to quell pro-Palestinian protests
- Thousands march from Israeli embassy in London to the Houses of Parliament as international anger grows
- Protests in Paris break out into violence with police using batons and tear gas as last minutes of ceasefire tick by
Israel
 has extended a humanitarian ceasefire in the Gaza Strip for another 24 
hours, but Hamas, which dominates the coastal enclave, said that it 
would only accept the truce if Israeli troops left the territory.
Israeli
 ministers had signalled that a comprehensive deal to end the 20-day 
conflict with Hamas and its allies, in which at least 1,050 Gazans - 
mostly civilians - have been killed, and 42 soldiers and three civilians
 in Israel have died, was remote.
'At
 the request of the United Nations, the cabinet has approved a 
humanitarian hiatus until tomorrow at midnight local time (2100 GMT 
Sunday),' the official, who was not named, said in a statement after the
 cabinet session held in Tel Aviv had ended. 'The IDF (Israel Defence 
Forces) will act against any breach of the ceasefire.'

Palestinians walk by the rubble of 
houses destroyed by Israeli strikes in Beit Hanoun, northern Gaza Strip.
 Thousands of Gaza residents who had fled Israel-Hamas fighting streamed
 back to devastated border areas during a lull Saturday, and were met by
 large-scale destruction

A Palestinian news assistant working 
with foreign media points to his family's house which was destroyed by 
Israeli strikes in Beit Hanoun, northern Gaza Strip
Yesterday,
 Gazans took advantage of the lull in fighting to recover their dead and
 stock up on food supplies, flooding into the streets after the 
ceasefire began at 8am (0500 GMT) to discover scenes of massive 
destruction in some areas.
The positions of both Israel and Hamas regarding a long-lasting halt to hostilities have remained far apart.
Hamas
 wants an end to an Israeli-Egyptian blockade of Gaza before agreeing to
 halt hostilities. Israeli officials that said any ceasefire must allow 
the military to carry on hunting down the Hamas tunnel network that 
crisscrosses the Gaza border.

A Palestinian woman carries her 
belongings past the rubble of houses destroyed by Israeli strikes in 
Beit Hanoun, northern Gaza Strip

A picture taken yesterday shows the 
rubble of destroyed buildings and homes in the Shejaiya residential 
district of Gaza City, as families returned to find their homes ground 
into rubble by relentless Israeli tank fire and air strikes

Palestinians walk by the rubble of houses destroyed by Israeli strikes in Beit Hanoun, northern Gaza Strip yesterday
Israel
 says some of the tunnels reach into Israeli territory and are meant to 
carry out attacks on its citizens. Other underground passages serve as 
weapons caches and Hamas bunkers.
The IDF said it had uncovered four such tunnel shafts inside Gaza during the truce yesterday.
The
 Israeli official added that troops would continue to act against any 
breaches of the ceasefire, adding that the military would investigate 
the tunnels during the entire 24-hour period.
He
 said the cabinet would reconvene today to consider a continuation of 
the operation 'until calm is restored to Israeli citizens for an 
extended period'.
The Gaza turmoil has stoked tensions among Palestinians in Arab East Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank.

An Israeli artillery cannon fires from
 southern Israel into the Gaza Strip, early yesterday, just before the 
start of the 12 hour humanitarian aid ceasefire. The Israeli military 
said it would continue destroying Hamas's tunnel networks under the Gaza
 border even during the ceasefire

Palestinian Muhammed Abu Auda (left) 
accompanied by his relative Yousef Abu Auda, inspects the rubble of what
 used to be the house of his father, destroyed by Israeli strikes in 
Beit Hanoun, northern Gaza Strip
Doctors
 reported that eight Palestinians were killed on Friday in incidents 
near the West Bank cities of Nablus and Hebron - the sort of death toll 
reminiscent of previous uprisings against Israel's prolonged military 
rule there.
Despite
 Israel extending the ceasefire, Hamas has said that it fired five 
rockets at Israel late last night, casting new doubt on international 
efforts to broker an end to 20 days of fighting.
Hamas
 said two of the rockets were aimed at Tel Aviv. Police in Israel's 
second-largest city dispersed a peace rally attended by several thousand
 people because of the threat, a spokesman said.
In
 Paris, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and European foreign 
ministers met yesterday to find ways to transform the initial 12-hour 
lull into a sustainable truce.
'Rockets
 have just been fired at Israel despite the humanitarian truce being 
extended' until 2100 GMT, Israeli army spokesman Avital Leibovich wrote 
earlier on Twitter shortly after 1700 GMT, when the original truce had 
been due to end.
Another
 military spokesman told AFP that three mortar rounds had been fired at 
Israel from Gaza but had caused neither casualties nor damage.
Warning sirens sounded in southern Israel shortly after 8pm local time, when the original truce was due to expire. 

Picking up the pieces: A Palestinian woman walks
 across the rubble of destroyed buildings in Gaza City as residents 
returned to examine damage in a 12-hour ceasefire

The long walk home: Palestinians returned this 
morning to check on their homes and businesses in the northern district 
of Beit Hanun, Gaza

A Palestinian of the Keferna family runs to save his pet birds during the temporary truce

Upon their return, Palestinians pour 
water to save the family's birds after finding them alive at the family 
house destroyed by Israeli strikes
More
 than 1,050 Palestinians have now died in the 20-day Gaza conflict after
 scores of bodies were pulled from rubble during a tense ceasefire 
lasting less than a day.
The
 truce came as protests erupted in London and Paris, with French police 
using tear gas and batons to quell a 'banned' protest by 
pro-Palestinians.
In Gaza, the dead included 18 members of the same family who were killed by Israeli tank shelling moments before the truce began this morning.
As
 the guns and bombs fell silent and Israeli soldiers reloaded tank 
ammunition, thousands of residents returned to survey the damage and 
watch rescue workers retrieve bodies from under collapsed buildings.
 US Secretary of State John Kerry, third from left, stands with from 
left, Qatari Foreign Minister Khaled al-Attiyah, Turkish Foreign 
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, 
British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, German Foreign Minister 
Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Italian Foreign Minister Federica Mogherini 
after their meeting regarding a cease-fire between Hamas and Israel in 
Gaza, Saturday, July 26, 2014, at the foreign ministry in Paris, France.
 With a 12-hour humanitarian cease-fire in Gaza Saturday, Kerry is 
continuing with efforts to reach a longer truce between Israel and 
Hamas. (photo credit: AP/Charles Dharapak)
US Secretary of State John Kerry, third from left, stands with from 
left, Qatari Foreign Minister Khaled al-Attiyah, Turkish Foreign 
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, 
British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, German Foreign Minister 
Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Italian Foreign Minister Federica Mogherini 
after their meeting regarding a cease-fire between Hamas and Israel in 
Gaza, Saturday, July 26, 2014, at the foreign ministry in Paris, France.
 With a 12-hour humanitarian cease-fire in Gaza Saturday, Kerry is 
continuing with efforts to reach a longer truce between Israel and 
Hamas. (photo credit: AP/Charles Dharapak)
 US Secretary of State John Kerry, third from left, stands with from 
left, Qatari Foreign Minister Khaled al-Attiyah, Turkish Foreign 
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, 
British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, German Foreign Minister 
Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Italian Foreign Minister Federica Mogherini 
after their meeting regarding a cease-fire between Hamas and Israel in 
Gaza, Saturday, July 26, 2014, at the foreign ministry in Paris, France.
 With a 12-hour humanitarian cease-fire in Gaza Saturday, Kerry is 
continuing with efforts to reach a longer truce between Israel and 
Hamas. (photo credit: AP/Charles Dharapak)
US Secretary of State John Kerry, third from left, stands with from 
left, Qatari Foreign Minister Khaled al-Attiyah, Turkish Foreign 
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, 
British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, German Foreign Minister 
Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Italian Foreign Minister Federica Mogherini 
after their meeting regarding a cease-fire between Hamas and Israel in 
Gaza, Saturday, July 26, 2014, at the foreign ministry in Paris, France.
 With a 12-hour humanitarian cease-fire in Gaza Saturday, Kerry is 
continuing with efforts to reach a longer truce between Israel and 
Hamas. (photo credit: AP/Charles Dharapak)
France's interior minister called on 
organisers of the banned pro-Gaza protest to observe the order, fearing 
anti-Semitic violence. 
Bernard
 Cazeneuve made his public appeal shortly before today's demonstration 
in Paris was to start. Hours earlier, the Council of State, France's top
 administrative body, ruled the protest ban was legal. 
A court had ruled likewise, but organisers said they still planned to hold the protest. 
Pakistani Shiite Muslims burn Israel 
and United States flags, and torch effigies of Israeli and US 
representatives during a rally against Israel and the United States
France
 has Western Europe's largest Jewish and Muslim populations. Two banned 
pro-Gaza protests last weekend, in Paris and Sarcelles, to the north, 
degenerated into violence and attacks on synagogues. On Wednesday, an 
authorized demonstration was peaceful. 
Cazeneuve said chatter on social networks indicated a risk that today's protest could become a 'cortege of violence.'
Thousands
 of activists were preparing to gather in other major cities around the 
world, including at the Israeli embassy in London, where police 
estimated at least 10,000 were due to march on Parliament.

Pressure: Seven leaders demanded an extension to
 the 12-hour ceasefire as marches gathered around the world, including 
outside the Israeli embassy in London

March: The large group, estimated to be around 
10,000-strong by police, filed past London landmarks including the Royal
 Albert Hall en route to Parliament

Support: In Newcastle, protesters in support of 
Palestinians carried a coffin through the streets as they called on 
Israel to halt the conflict

Big questions: A protestor holding a placard 
during a protest on the Republique Square in Paris, which had been 
banned by the authorities

Stand-off: French riot police prepare their 
shields as they face up to protestors in the capital, near a meeting of 
world leaders. They later used tear gas

Movement: A rally in London today reached 
Parliament Square as it was revealed more than 1,000 people had been 
killed in Gaza, with scores pulled from rubble
The pro-Palestinians gathered waving 
placards and shouting loud slogans in Kensington, west London, in an 
echo of other Saturday protests including in Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
Yesterday
 foreign ministers from seven nations called in vain for an urgent 
extension of the 12-hour ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.
French
 Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said: 'All of us call on the parties to
 extend the military ceasefire that is currently underway.'
The
 gathering in Paris included the foreign ministers of Britain, France, 
Germany, Italy, Qatar, Turkey and the United States. An EU official also
 attended the meeting at the French foreign ministry.

Killing: As the Palestinian death toll in 
the 19-day conflict topped 900, Gaza's Health Ministry said 18 members 
of the Al-Najar family died in the southern Gaza Strip shortly before 
today's truce took effect. Pictured, rescue workers remove the body of 
one of the family members as villagers look on near the city of Khan 
Younis

Mourning: Palestinians watch as rescue workers 
find the body of a member of al-Najar family, after removing it from 
under the rubble of their home

Ceasfire: Rescue workers removed the body of a 
member of the Al-Najar family using a digger after the brief truce was 
agreed at 8am local time

Carnage: The death toll during 19-day conflict 
has reached at least 900 Palestinians and 40 Israelis including 37 
soldiers. Pictured: Rescue workers in southern Gaza

More bodies: Paramedics stretcher away the 
charred body of an ambulance driver killed the previous night by Israeli
 fire in Beit Hanun

Grief: A Palestinian woman reacts after seeing 
her house destroyed in Gaza City. Hundreds of people returned to 
under-fire neighbourhoods during the ceasefire
It
 also insisted troops 'shall respond if terrorists choose to exploit' 
the lull to attack Israeli soldiers or civilians. The military also said
 'operational activities to locate and neutralise tunnels in the Gaza 
Strip will continue.'
A spokesman for Hamas said all Palestinian factions would 
abide by the brief truce.
Hundreds
 of Palestinians poured into the streets in the minutes after the truce 
took force, some on foot to inspect damage to their homes, and many 
lined up outside banks to withdraw cash and stock up on supplies.
Residents of Beit Hanoun in the northern
 Gaza strip walked through destroyed streets lined with damaged houses 
and entire buildings reduced to rubble. Some who had not seen each other
 for days embraced as they surveyed the wreckage around them.
'We 
lived through a night of horror. The shelling was all around our house,'
 said Hanan al-Zaanin, standing with four of her children outside their 
home in Beit Hanoun, 30,000 of whose residents had fled the area.

Brief truce: Smoke from an Israeli air strike 
rises into the air over Gaza City early this morning, where a truce was 
agreed from 8am local time for 12 hours

Fireball: Shortly before the truce was agreed, 
another huge explosion was seen in Gaza City in the early hours. The 
deadline was set at 5pm GMT

Toll: The death toll has now topped well over 
900 Palestinians and 40 Israelis, including 37 soldiers and three 
civilians, according to official health agencies

Death toll: Palestinians carry a body of a man 
found under the rubble of a destroyed house during a 12-hour ceasefire 
in Gaza City's Shijaiyah neighbourhood

Hundreds of Palestinians poured into the streets
 in the minutes after the truce took force, some on foot to inspect 
damage to their homes

Halt in fighting: Israeli soldiers on top of 
their tanks at the border between the Gaza Strip and Israel. World 
leaders are gathering to negotiate a long-term ceasefire

Reloading: Israeli forces inspect and load tank 
ammunition this morning during the truce. Tensions are increasing to 
bring an end to the bloody conflict

Israel said that two more of its soldiers were 
killed in Gaza, bringing the army death toll to 37, as troops battled 
militants in the north, east and south of Gaza

Lull: An Israeli soldier reads on top of his 
tank near the border of Israel and Gaza today after the ceasefire was 
declared. World leaders called for it to be extended
She added: 'We hope the calm 
lasts and they find a solution so fighting ends. We are afraid for our 
children's safety.'
Siham Kafarneh, 37, sat on the steps of a small grocery, weeping.
The mother-of-eight said the home she had moved into two months earlier and spent 10 years saving for had been destroyed. 
'Nothing is left. Everything I have is gone,' she said. 
Israeli tanks stood by as people searched 
through the debris for their belongings, packing
blankets, furniture and clothes into taxis, trucks, rickshaws, and 
donkey carts before fleeing the town.
Fighting continued until the 
truce took hold. Militants fired a barrage of rockets out of Gaza, 
triggering sirens across much of southern and central Israel. No 
injuries were reported and the Iron Dome interceptor system shot down 
some missiles.
Israel said 
that two more of its soldiers were killed in Gaza, bringing the army 
death toll to 37, as troops battled militants in the north, east and 
south of Gaza - a tiny Mediterranean enclave that is home to 1.8million 
Palestinians.
Three civilians have also been killed
 in Israel by rockets from Gaza - the kind of attack that surged last 
month amid Hamas's anger at a crackdown on its activists in the West 
Bank, prompting the July 8 launch of the Israeli offensive.
It
 also announced that a soldier unaccounted for after an ambush in Gaza 
six days ago was definitely dead, although his body had not been 
recovered. Hamas said on Sunday it had captured the man but did not 
release a photograph of him.

More funerals: Palestinian mourners pray for 
Taib Mohammed Odeh, 22, and Khaled Odeh, 21, at a mosque in Hawara 
village in northern West Bank during the truce

Salvage: Palestinians take usable things in belongings which they recovered from their destroyed houses during the ceasefire

Smoke rises from a vehicle destroyed by an 
Israeli strike after Palestinian firefighters put out the blaze in Gaza 
City in the early hours of today (Saturday)

Conflict: A member of the media walks past the 
vehicle which was destroyed by an Israeli strike in Gaza City as 
tensions continued to flare overnight in the region

Chaos: Smoke rises from the vehicle in the early
 hours today. Elsewhere in the Gaza Strip, Israeli tank shelling 
reportedly killed 18 members of the same family
On Friday Israeli undercover police were involved in street conflicts with 
Palestinian protesters in Jerusalem as officers were put on high alert 
for flare-ups at the city's most important mosque during Friday prayers 
for the final stretch of the Ramadan Muslim holy month.
Hundreds of 
Palestinians protested in the traditionally Arab east of the city after 
Muslim noon prayers on Friday. A dozen protesters threw rocks and fireworks 
at Israeli police, who fired stun grenades and water cannons.





 
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