Israel yesterday bombed buildings in the Gaza Strip which the army said were being used by militants to make rockets for attacks on the Jewish state.
Israel warned residents to leave the buildings before the air strikes to try to avoid civilian casualties.
One of the targeted warehouses was being used by the Islamic Jihad militant group to manufacture and store missiles and ammunition, the Israeli army said. Palestinian sources confirmed that the group had been using the storage site.
Israel also hit a facility used by Hamas to make rockets, the army said.
In its more than three-week operation against militants in Gaza, the Israeli military has killed around 115 Palestinians, the majority of them civilians.
The operation was designed to stop militants firing rockets into Israel and to secure the release of an Israeli soldier seized by members of Hamas and other militant groups on June 25.
Sharon
Meanwhile, former Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon's life is in danger after his condition deteriorated in the past two days, a stroke expert said yesterday.
The Sheba Medical Center near Tel Aviv, where Sharon is being treated, released a statement late on Sunday saying the former leader's kidneys were failing and that changes were detected in his brain membrane. Sharon, 78, has been in a coma since suffering a massive stroke in January.
Two of Sharon's former aides, who said they spoke to his son Gilad, said there was no immediate danger to the former leader's life. The former aides spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press.
But John Martin, a cardiovascular expert at London's University College, said the kidney failure and the changes in the brain membrane that Sharon has suffered in the past two days indicate the former leader's life is in danger. His comments were echoed by other physicians quoted in Israeli media.
Kidney dialysis and drugs to treat what appears to be cerebral edema could lead to an improvement in Sharon's condition within hours, Martin said. But many physicians would choose not to take such steps when a patient has been in a coma for more than seven months, he added.
"This is a significant decrease in his condition," Martin said. "Shall we give dialysis or shall we let him die ... most European physicians would consider this at this point."
The Sheba hospital said in a statement more tests were being run on the former leader to determine what had caused the change in his condition. But a spokeswoman at the hospital refused to say whether Sharon's life was in danger.
Sharon, Israel's most popular politician, had a small stroke in December and was put on blood thinners before he suffered a severe brain hemorrhage in January. He underwent several, extensive brain surgeries to stop the bleeding, and many independent experts doubted that he would ever recover.
The last surgery on Sharon, in April, was to reattach a part of his skull, removed during the emergency surgery to reduce pressure on his brain. The reattachment was described as a necessary step before transferring Sharon to the long-term care facility at Sheba hospital.
Experts have said Sharon's chances of ever waking up after his massive stroke in January are not good.
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Sharon personified Israel's military might for decades, and Israelis were stunned to see him felled by illness.
His stroke came after Sharon saw through his contentious plan to withdrawal Israel from the Gaza Strip after 38 years, and just two months after Sharon shook up the Israeli political map by bolting his hard-line Likud Party to form the centrist Kadima faction.
After the stroke, Sharon's successor as party leader, Ehud Olmert, led Kadima to victory in a March 28 vote and became prime minister.
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