Volunteers describe scene of devastation

ON THE GROUND: AMBULANCES WERE able to drive to some of the most heavily shelled areas in Gaza for the first time yesterday …

ON THE GROUND:AMBULANCES WERE able to drive to some of the most heavily shelled areas in Gaza for the first time yesterday to collect the dead and injured as Israel paused its military offensive for three hours to allow in aid, amid growing international pressure to call a ceasefire and ease the humanitarian crisis.

A team of medics and volunteers from the Palestinian Red Crescent took advantage of the lull in fighting to drive to Zeitoun, the scene of an Israeli attack on a house on Monday that was known to have killed nine members of the Samouni family. It was the first time medics had been able to reach the scene.

Muhammad Shaheen, a Red Crescent volunteer, said the team found a scene of devastation. They discovered another 10 corpses inside the house and "dozens" more dead lying in the rubble.

"It was an unbelievable sight," he said. "There was a huge number of dead bodies, houses were completely destroyed and many others partially destroyed."

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The team found about 10 injured people in the house and another 15 who were unhurt, but still sheltering from the fighting.

As aid trucks drove in, many Palestinians left their homes to shop and stock up on food while they could. "Food and milk - what else can we hope for in three hours," said Ahmed Abu Kamel, a father of six who lives near Gaza City. "We want it all to end."

Several Israeli tanks were close by, next to the remains of the Israeli settlement at Netzarim, which has become a key Israeli military position during this conflict. The troops told the medical teams to park their vehicles and walk to the house to collect the dead and injured. All were brought back to Gaza City.

"We tried to help as much as we could, but it was hard to get access to the whole area. The roads were destroyed, there was rubble everywhere," said Mr Shaheen.

Some Israeli officials suggested that similar pauses in the fighting would be held every afternoon during the conflict. Peter Lerner, an Israeli military spokesman who works on the crossings, said lulls would be considered.

Even during the pause in operations, Israeli soldiers might still fight, he said. "For every attack against the army, there will be a response," he said.

The death toll continued to mount. Last night, an Israeli air strike on a car killed a man and his three children in northern Gaza, Palestinian medical officials said.

At least 28 Palestinians were killed yesterday in attacks across the Gaza Strip, according to Palestinian medical officials. Journalists are still banned from entering Gaza to report on the killings.

In a separate incident, the aid agency Care International said one of its staff on a food distribution project was killed on Tuesday night when his home was hit by an Israeli air strike. Muhammad Samouni died in the attack and his son was critically injured, the agency said.

Although lorries carrying medical supplies and food were allowed into Gaza yesterday, along with deliveries of industrial diesel, concern about the crisis is still growing. The World Bank warned there was a threat of a severe public health crisis because of a shortage of drinking water and the failure of the sewage system.

Nearly all sewage and water pumps were out of operation because of a lack of electricity and limited fuel, it said.

Even when fuel was delivered, it was too dangerous to take it to the pumps where it was most needed, the bank said. A regular electricity supply was needed and maintenance work urgently required on a large sewage lake in Beit Lahiya that was in danger of bursting.

"As of today, nearly the entire population of Gaza is without running water and is dependent on their own stored water supplies and limited sales by private water distributors," the bank said.

Sewage had already flooded in some areas, it said, and warned that as many as 10,000 Palestinians were at risk of drowning if the Beit Lahiya sewage lake burst.