GAZA/JERUSALEM (Reuters) - An Israeli missile killed at least 11 Palestinian civilians including four children in Gaza on Sunday, medical officials said, apparently an attack on a top militant that brought a three-storey home crashing down.
International pressure for a ceasefire seemed certain to mount in response to the deadliest single incident in five days of Palestinian rocket attacks on Israel and Israeli air strikes on the Gaza Strip.
Egypt has taken the lead in trying to broker a ceasefire and Israeli media said a delegation from Israel had been to Cairo for talks on ending the fighting, although a government spokesman declined to comment on the matter.
Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi met Hamas political
 leader Khaled Meshaal and Islamic Jihad's head Ramadan Shallah as part 
of the mediation efforts, but a presidency statement did not say if they
 were conclusive.
Izzat Risheq, a close aide to 
Meshaal, wrote in a Facebook message that Hamas would agree to a 
ceasefire only after Israel "stops its aggression, ends its policy of 
targeted assassinations and lifts the blockade of Gaza".
Listing Israel's terms for 
ceasing fire, Moshe Yaalon, a deputy to the prime minister, wrote on 
Twitter: "If there is quiet in the south and no rockets and missiles are
 fired at Israel's citizens, nor terrorist attacks engineered from the 
Gaza Strip, we will not attack."
Gaza health officials said 72 
Palestinians , 21 of them children and several women have been killed in
 Gaza since Israel's offensive began. Hundreds have been wounded.
Israel gave off signs of a 
possible ground invasion of the Hamas-run enclave as the next stage in 
its offensive, billed as a bid to stop Palestinian rocket fire into the 
Jewish state. It also spelt out its conditions for a truce.
U.S. President Barack Obama said
 that while Israel had a right to defend itself against the salvoes, it 
would be "preferable" to avoid a military thrust into the Gaza Strip, a 
narrow, densely populated coastal territory. Such an assault would risk 
high casualties and an international outcry.
A spokesman for the Hamas-run 
Interior Ministry said 11 people, all of them civilians, were killed 
when an Israeli missile flattened the home of the Dalu family. Medics 
said four women and four children were among the dead.
Israel's chief military spokesman
 said Yihia Abayah, a senior commander of rocket operations in the Gaza 
Strip, had been the target.
The spokesman, Yoav Mordechai, told Israel's Channel 2 television he 
did not know whether Abayah was killed, "but the outcome was that there 
were civilian casualties". He made no direct mention of the destroyed 
dwelling.Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said earlier that he had assured world leaders that Israel was doing its utmost to avoid causing civilian casualties in the military showdown with Hamas.
"The massacre of the Dalu family will not pass without punishment," Hamas's armed wing said in a statement.
VIOLENCE
In other air raids on Sunday, two
 Gaza City media buildings were hit, witnesses said. Eight journalists 
were wounded and facilities belonging to Hamas's Al-Aqsa TV as well as 
Britain's Sky News were damaged.
An employee of the Beirut-based al Quds television station lost his leg in the attack, local medics said.
The Israeli military said
 the strike targeted a rooftop "transmission antenna used by Hamas to 
carry out terror activity", and that journalists in the building had 
effectively been used as human shields by Gaza's rulers.
For their part, Gaza militants 
launched dozens of rockets into Israel and targeted its commercial 
capital, Tel Aviv, for a fourth day, once in the morning and another 
after dark.
Israel's "Iron Dome" missile 
shield shot down all three rockets, but falling debris from the daytime 
interception hit a car, which caught fire. Its driver was not hurt.
In scenes recalling Israel's 
2008-2009 winter invasion of Gaza, tanks, artillery and infantry massed 
in field encampments along the sandy, fenced-off border. Military 
convoys moved on roads in the area newly closed to civilian traffic.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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