Gaza conflict: Israel PM Netanyahu vows further campaign Published duration 20 August 2014

media caption Benjamin Netanyahu: "I will continue to operate with firmness and insistence"

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed a continued campaign against Gaza militants, amid renewed fighting between the two sides.

Israel's military says it carried out 92 air strikes on Wednesday in response to 137 rockets fired from Gaza.

Hamas says the wife and child of its military commander, Mohammed Deif, were killed in an Israeli strike on Tuesday.

Hostilities resumed on Tuesday, with each side blaming the other for the collapse of peace talks in Cairo.

Six weeks of fierce fighting have left at least 2,103 people dead.

Egypt has expressed "profound regret" at the end of the 10-day period of calm during the talks, and said it will continue to try to secure a lasting truce.

Meanwhile, the 15-member UN Security Council has voiced "grave concern" at the resumption of the hostilities and "called upon the parties to resume negotiations to urgently reach a sustainable and lasting ceasefire".

'We will not stop'

In a televised address, Mr Netanyahu said he was "determined to continue the campaign with all means and as is needed."

"We will not stop until we secure full security and quiet for the residents of the south and all citizens of Israel.''

He likened Palestinian group Hamas to the jihadist group Islamic State, calling them a "branch of the same tree".

Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhum said Mr Netanyahu's statement was "an attempt to rationalise defeat and cover up failures".

image copyright AP image caption Mourners carry the body of Mohammed Deif's wife, Widad Mustafa, at the beginning of the funeral procession

Earlier on Wednesday, a Hamas official said Mr Deif was "still alive and leading the military operation" against Israel.

The air strike that killed his wife and young son on Tuesday is thought to have been intended to kill Mr Deif himself, correspondents say.

Mr Deif - the commander of Hamas' armed wing, the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades - has survived a number of previous Israeli assassination attempts believed to have left him with severe disabilities.

media caption The BBC's Yolande Knell at the scene in Gaza says Mohammed Deif has "long been on Israel's most wanted list"

Israeli Interior Minister Gideon Saar said the attack was justified because Mr Deif was "personally responsible" for dozens of deaths.

Yaakov Perry, Israel's science minister and former security service chief, said he was "convinced that if there was intelligence that [he] was not inside the home, then we would not have bombed it".

There were further Israeli air strikes on Gaza on Wednesday which, according to local medics, killed a heavily pregnant woman and several children.

Our correspondent says the apparent attempt to kill Mohammed Deif may explain the intensity of the rocket fire that came after the collapse of the Cairo peace talks.

image copyright AFP image caption Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in Gaza have been displaced by the conflict

image copyright AFP image caption Israeli army tanks remain deployed along the frontier with Gaza

The Israeli government accused Hamas of breaking the ceasefire, while Palestinian negotiators blamed Israel for the failure of the indirect talks.

media caption Palestinian representative to the UN, Riyad Mansour: ""We are still willing and ready to resume the efforts in Cairo and it is the Israeli side that has taken this option"

Israel went to the talks seeking guarantees that Hamas and other factions in Gaza would be disarmed, while the Palestinians demanded an end to the Israeli and Egyptian blockades of Gaza, and the establishment of a seaport and airport.

'Bureaucratic games'

Meanwhile, human rights groups have called on Israel to allow them into Gaza so they can investigate allegations of violations of international humanitarian law by both sides.

In a joint statement, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch accused Israel of "playing bureaucratic games" with them by continually denying the groups' requests to cross the border.

Israel launched Operation Protective Edge on 8 July with the aim of ending Hamas rocket fire. It also sought to destroy tunnels dug under the frontier with Israel used by militants to launch attack.

Since then, at least 2,036 people, most of them civilians, have been killed in Gaza, according to the Palestinian health ministry. The Israeli authorities say 64 Israeli soldiers have been killed, along with two Israeli civilians and a Thai national.

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