samedi 19 juillet 2014

Gaza: Fabius "deeply concerned" about the lack of a ceasefire

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on Saturday Israel of "deeply concerned" about the lack of a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, where the Israeli army launched a bloody operation against Hamas.

"Calling a cease-fire and the alarm is not deep listening," said a brief statement to reporters at the Ben Gurion airport near Laurent Fabius, Tel Aviv after a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

"I called a truce, but not heard. France and continue to work for peace and truce, taking into account the safety and living conditions of the Palestinians in Israel," the head of French diplomacy in the region said today.

Previously, Laurent Fabius argued Tuesday during a stopover in Jordan in "absolute priority" to reach a ceasefire in Gaza and said that the international community supports the Hamas rejected an Egyptian proposal for a ceasefire.

"Human sacrifice was difficult to avoid, and there are S? See expanded."

"The Egyptian initiative (for a ceasefire between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas) was still on the table," he said, noting that "Jordan (...), and France and other countries" supported the Egyptian proposal.

Monday, Egypt, ordinary mediator in the conflict between Hamas and Israel, which denied the initiative of the ceasefire, Israel and Hamas.

Prior to his station in Jordan, Laurent Fabius went to Cairo, where he met with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.

L? Israel's operation against Hamas suffered at the beginning of the Israeli operation one of the bloodiest days of the 46 Palestinians in Gaza killed 342 Palestinians Saturday.

Two soldiers were killed by undercover Israeli forces in the Palestinian enclave in the twelfth day of the offensive.

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