Israel pledges to continue offensive in Lebanon

Israel rejected mounting international pressure this evening to end its war against Hizbollah and launched a new incursion into Lebanon, as world powers squabbled over the urgency of a ceasefire.

A UN official said a meeting scheduled for Monday on a new peacekeeping force for Lebanon had been delayed "until there is more political clarity" on the path ahead in the 20-day-old war.

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said at the end of a trip to Israel that a ceasefire could be achieved this week. But despite an international outcry over an air strike on Sunday that killed 54 civilians, most of them children, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said there would be no cease-fire for now.

"The fighting continues. There is no ceasefire and there will not be any cease-fire in the coming days," Olmert told local officials, drawing sustained applause.

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Israeli artillery shells rain down on a southern Lebanese village last night
Israeli artillery shells fall on a southern Lebanese village last night

Civilians fled battered villages in southern Lebanon after Israel agreed partially to halt air strikes for 48 hours, and aid convoys headed into the area to deliver supplies.

Rescue workers found 49 bodies buried for days in collapsed buildings or inside destroyed vehicles, medical sources said.

The Israeli military said it had launched a new ground incursion into Lebanon in the Aita al-Shaab area. Hizbollah said its guerrillas were fiercely resisting the advance.

Air raids continued despite Israel's announcement of a partial 48-hour suspension of bombing.

Israel also said it was giving a 24-hour window to allow aid workers to reach the worst hit areas and residents to flee.

Civilians drove towards the southern port city of Tyre, 20 km north of the border, white flags fluttering from their cars, buses and pickup trucks.

But the United Nations said access had not improved.

"Let's be clear about this. There was fighting today in south Lebanon and there were Hizbollah rocket attacks. We don't have a cessation of hostilities and we don't have a cessation of aerial bombardments," spokesman Khaled Mansour said.

Israeli jets bombarded targets in the south Lebanon hills and artillery shells hit two villages. A Lebanese soldier died and three were wounded when an air strike hit their vehicle.

At the main border crossing into Lebanon from Syria, Israeli drones fired at two trucks and a third lorry was destroyed by a warplane, security sources said. Four Lebanese customs officials and the three drivers were wounded.

Hizbollah said its guerrillas hit an Israeli warship with rockets off the coast of the south Lebanese port city of Tyre on Monday, prompting celebratory gunfire to ring out in Beirut. But an Israeli military spokeswoman said no warship had been hit.

"If an immediate cease-fire is declared, the extremists will rear their heads anew," Defence Minister Amir Peretz told a heated parliamentary debate in which four Israeli Arab lawmakers were escorted out for heckling. One called Peretz a murderer.

Despite its pause in air raids from early today, Israel said it may still use aerial strikes to target Hizbollah leaders and rocket launchers and back up ground operations.

Mr Olmert said a cease-fire could be implemented immediately after an international force arrived in Lebanon.

But French Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin said an international force could be deployed only once a cease-fire and a clear political road map had been agreed. France and Germany welcomed Israel's suspension of most air strikes but said it was not enough. Russia also demanded an immediate ceasefire.

But the United States, which blames Hizbollah for the war, is refusing to back calls for an immediate halt to the fighting. US President George W. Bush repeated that he wanted a sustainable end to the violence.

After the Qana raid Lebanon called off planned talks with Rice, telling her to secure an unconditional cease-fire first.

"As I head back to Washington, I take with me an emerging consensus on what is necessary for both an urgent ceasefire and lasting settlement. I am convinced we can achieve both this week," Ms Rice told reporters in Jerusalem.

At least 598 people have been killed in Lebanon, although the health minister puts the toll at 750 including bodies still buried under rubble. Fifty-one Israelis have been killed.