Abbas breaks contact with Israel
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas has suspended contact with Israel in protest at an assault on Gaza which has killed about 100 people, an aide says.
The suspension came amid angry demonstrations in Gaza and clashes with Israeli troops in the West Bank.
Israeli PM Ehud Olmert vowed to carry on the assault, which came in response to militant rocket attacks on Israel.
The violence intensified on Saturday, when nearly 70 people were killed in one of Gaza's bloodiest days in years.
Local doctors said at least 13 of the Palestinians were civilians, including eight children.
At least another five people were killed overnight in Gaza.
The negotiations are suspended, because in light of the Israeli aggression such communication has no meaning
Mahmoud Abbas
Egypt said it had opened its border crossing with Gaza and was letting critically injured Palestinians across to get medical attention.
Reports say at least 100 people will be allowed in.
The fighting has drawn international calls for restraint, with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon urging both sides to halt the violence.
But Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak said his country needed to prepare for an escalation of its air and ground operations in Gaza.
'Pointless' talks
Rocket attacks on Israel have continued despite the assault on Gaza.
Uri Bar Lev, police chief in southern Israel, told the BBC that the border town of Sderot had been targeted by 15 rockets so far on Sunday, and that 10 people had been injured.
He added that about 50 rockets were falling on the town each day. One Israeli died in an attack earlier this week.
Palestinian rockets have reached as far as the Israeli town Ashkelon, 16km (10 miles) from the Gaza Strip.
Mr Abbas' spokesman, Nabil Abu Rudeina, blamed Israel for the suspension of talks on all levels.
"In light of the Israeli aggression such communication has no meaning," he said.
A spokesman for Israel's Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, Arye Mekel, told Reuters news agency the Palestinian decision was a mistake, and expressed hope that negotiations would resume.
West Bank clashes
Mr Abbas restarted the talks after a conference in November in the US city of Annapolis.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is due to visit the region in a few days.
Fighting continued in the Gaza Strip on Sunday, with Israeli troops operating in the northern town of Jabaliya for a second day.
The offices of Ismail Haniya, a senior Hamas leader in Gaza City, were destroyed in an air attack that killed five people overnight.
Sporadic gunfire is continuing around Gaza, as funerals are held across the territory.
There have also been clashes in the West Bank.
A Palestinian teenager was killed in Hebron as troops responded to stone-throwing youths with rubber bullets and tear gas.
Other protests were held in Nablus, Ramallah and Bethlehem, AFP news agency reported.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/7273686.stmPublished: 2008/03/02 15:15:37 GMT
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This is indead good news for Israel, Every Jewish person shud praise G-d for creating such stupid enemies like palestinians; everybody want to help them; US, UK, UN, EU, even Israeli left and goverment but they're so full of blind hatred inspired by their god alla that they blew one ocasion after other. Baruh Hashem!