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A Palestinian boy sits on the rubble of his house destroyed in an Israeli airstrike
A Palestinian boy sits on the rubble of his house destroyed in an Israeli airstrike, in Beit Hanun, Gaza. Photograph: Mohammed Saber/EPA
A Palestinian boy sits on the rubble of his house destroyed in an Israeli airstrike, in Beit Hanun, Gaza. Photograph: Mohammed Saber/EPA

Palestinians return to devastated homes as UN calls for Gaza dialogue

This article is more than 2 years old

World leaders welcome ceasefire but Hamas and Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu remain belligerent

Tens of thousands of displaced Palestinians in Gaza have begun returning to their homes to inspect the devastation from 11 days of Israeli airstrikes in its war with Hamas.

Gaza City, on the Mediterranean coast, had been warped by the attacks, with holes in the skyline where high-rise buildings had collapsed, their remains sprawling into the street. Cars mounted pavements to avoid craters.

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNWRA, said most of the 66,000 Palestinians who sought refuge in its schools during the fighting were heading home, as it began assessing the scale of the damage. A Palestinian official said on Saturday that an initial assessment showed that at least 2,000 housing units had been destroyed in the latest violence and 15,000 more damaged.

As families sought to retrieve possessions, civil defence teams pulled 10 survivors and five bodies from the rubble of the densely populated Palestinian enclave, taking the number of dead to 243, including scores of Hamas fighters and 66 children, with more than 1,900 wounded.

In Gaza City, teenagers dug in the rubble for lost belongings and removed debris from roads, piling it into trucks or donkey carts. At a central roundabout, young boys ran into the road to peek inside a car that had been twisted by a strike. Others, trapped and petrified in their homes for days, went out with their families for ice cream along the coast.

At the main Shifa hospital, many of the wounded were receiving visitors for the first time in days, as previously it was too dangerous to venture out.

In one recovery ward, several people crowded around a woman with red burns covering her face and a metal surgical rod protruding from just above her left ankle.

Mona Amin, 47, had been at home in the northern town of Beit Lahia when she said an Israeli missile pierced straight through her apartment and detonated in her neighbour’s building.

“I was asleep,” she wheezed quietly, barely moving her body except for her eyes and mouth. Her forearms were covered in bandages, and a dressing on her head, mostly covered by her hijab, hid a shrapnel wound.

Amin said the strike killed her husband and three of her six children. Their ages were 19, 22 and 25. The 25-year-old was pregnant, Amin added, her voice beginning to shake as relatives rushed to console her.

A Palestinian views the damage at his home in Beit Hanoun, Gaza. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty

On the Israeli side, a week and a half of rocket, mortar and anti-tank missile fire by Hamas and other militant groups killed one soldier and 12 civilians. Hundreds more Israelis were treated for injuries after rocket salvoes that caused panic and sent people rushing into shelters.

But even as world leaders hailed a ceasefire that took hold in the early hours of Friday, and vowed to help rebuild, many of the tensions that led to the fourth war in Gaza in almost 13 years remained starkly in evidence, even as Washington stepped up its diplomatic efforts.

The US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, planned to visit Israel, the West Bank, Jordan and Egypt, which brokered the truce with Hamas, in a trip beginning on Wednesday “to discuss recovery efforts and working together to build better futures for Israelis and Palestinians”, a source briefed on the planning said on Saturday.

Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepts rockets launched from the Gaza Strip towards Israel. Photograph: Amir Cohen/Reuters

But in comments made just hours after the ceasefire came into effect, Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said Israel would respond forcefully in the event of any attack, as Hamas’s political leader, Ismail Haniyeh, said the fight against Israel would continue until al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem’s Old City was “liberated”.

“If Hamas thinks that we will tolerate a trickle of rockets, it is mistaken,” said Netanyahu. “We will respond with a different kind of force to any firing on Gaza border commutes. What was is not what will be.”

The Israeli leader, who has faced domestic criticism from hawks for ending the offensive too soon, added that Israel had done “daring and new things” and caused “maximum damage to Hamas with a minimum of casualties in Israel”.

Haniyeh was equally belligerent. “Israel’s defeat in the Gaza war will have major consequences for its future,” he said.

In a further warning of the dangerous frictions ahead, Israeli police once again clashed with stone-throwing protesters around al-Aqsa mosque, barely two weeks after similar events led to the violent escalation between both sides.

Police fired stun grenades and teargas, and Palestinians hurled rocks and at least one firebomb, after hundreds took part in a celebratory demonstration in which they waved Palestinian and Hamas flags and cheered the militant group.

Palestinians and Israeli police clash at Jerusalem's al-Aqsa mosque hours after Gaza truce – video

The trading of threats came as the UN secretary general urged Israel’s and Gaza’s Hamas rulers to observe the ceasefire, and called on global leaders to develop a reconstruction package “that supports the Palestinian people and strengthens their institutions”.

António Guterres also said after Thursday’s announcement of an end to 11 days of clashes: “Israeli and Palestinian leaders have a responsibility beyond the restoration of calm to start a serious dialogue to address the root causes of the conflict.”

Two teams of Egyptian mediators continued talks on Saturday in Israel and the Palestinian territories to firm up the ceasefire deal. While there is widespread expectation that the cessation in hostilities would stick for now, another round of fighting at some point seems inevitable: the latest chapter of the war has further sidelined Hamas’ main political rival, the internationally backed Palestinian Authority (PA), which oversees autonomous enclaves in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Hamas appears increasingly to be positioning itself in Palestinian public opinion as a defender of Jerusalem.

In an unprecedented display of anger against the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, and his self-rule government, thousands of Palestinians in al-Aqsa compound chanted against the PA in the early hours of Saturday, just after the ceasefire took effect.

“Dogs of the Palestinian Authority, out, out,” they shouted, and: “The people want the president to leave.”

Few analysts believe there will be progress towards resolving the fundamental issues in the immediate future. There were no signals of an end to Israel’s decades-old military grip over the Palestinian territories and its blockade on Gaza, where 2 million people live under hardline Hamas rule.

Speaking at a White House news conference on Friday, the US president, Joe Biden, declined to reveal his recent discussions with Netanyahu but said he believed the Israeli leader would maintain the ceasefire.

“I’m praying this ceasefire will hold. I take Bibi Netanyahu – when he gives me his word – I take him at his word. He’s never broken his word to me,” he said.

Biden said a two-state solution was the only answer to resolving the conflict between the sides, and pledged to build a major package with other countries to help rebuild Gaza.

The US president has been criticised around the world and in his own party for refusing to agree to a joint UN security council call for a ceasefire, and for his failure to criticise Israel directly for the heavy civilian casualties from its bombardment of Gaza in response to Hamas rockets.

News agencies contributed to this report

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