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![]() » Special Report | Video archive | E-mail us: Your stories | How to help civilians No letup on 12th day of fighting
![]() Smoke billows from a car hit by an Israeli airstrike in Tyre, Lebanon, Sunday. RELATEDQUICKVOTEYOUR E-MAIL ALERTSBEIRUT, Lebanon (CNN) -- Israeli warplanes and ground troops struck targets in Lebanon and Hezbollah forces lobbed rockets into Israel on Sunday as Saudi Arabia joined the call for an immediate cease-fire and Israel expressed support for an international peacekeeping force. More than 60 Hezbollah rockets hit northern Israel on Sunday, killing two civilians and wounding more than 20 others, military officials and police said. CNN witnessed some of these rockets in and around the port city of Haifa. One rocket hit a house in Haifa Sunday evening, wounding several people inside. (Watch Haifa prepare for new attacks -- 2:02) At least six Israeli bombs fell on the Lebanese coastal city of Tyre in a 20-minute span Sunday morning, killing one civilian and wounding at least 20 others, officials said. Israeli airstrikes also hit southern Beirut, and Israel Defense Forces said it struck a building that "serves Hezbollah" in the town of Sidon. At least 271 Lebanese people have been killed in the fighting, and 711 wounded, according to Lebanese security officials. Hezbollah attacks have killed seven Israeli civilians and 20 soldiers and wounded more than 300 civilians and more than 60 soldiers, according to the Israel Defense Forces. Israeli officials say Israel does not intend to carry out a full-scale ground invasion in Lebanon, but instead will continue pinpoint attacks on specific targets. Diplomatic sources told CNN's Christiane Amanpour that the operation could last a few more weeks. The IDF said two Lebanese suspected of terrorist activities were arrested Sunday near the southern Lebanon village of Maroun al-Ras. Hezbollah officials on Sunday conceded that Israel had taken control of the village after days of ground fighting. The IDF said it was trying to create a security buffer between the Israeli border and Hezbollah militants. (Watch why Israel believes Maroun al-Ras is so important -- 6:06) Diplomatic effortsSaudi Arabia's foreign minister said Sunday he urged President Bush to call for a cease-fire between Israel and Lebanon's Hezbollah guerrillas during a meeting at the White House. Prince Saud al-Faisal met with Bush before Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice left on a trip to the Middle East and Europe for talks on the conflict. Al-Faisal said he brought a message from King Abdullah "about putting a stop to the bleeding in Lebanon." "We requested a cease-fire to allow for the cessation of hostility, which would allow for the building of the forces of Lebanon in order to establish its sovereignty over the whole of its territory," he told reporters. Rice has said she won't be pursuing a cease-fire at the moment. Speaking at the State Department last week, she said Hezbollah is the source of the problem in Lebanon and a cease-fire "will be a false promise if it returns us to the status quo." (Full story) While the Saudis have joined other Arab countries in calling for a cease-fire, they also have been critical of Hezbollah for triggering the conflict. Al-Faisal said the central issue in the crisis is the weakness of Lebanon's government. Al-Faisal would not comment on a report that the Bush administration was asking his government and that of Egypt to pressure Syria and Iran, Hezbollah's sponsors, saying, "We only discussed strengthening Lebanon to extend its sovereignty over its territory." The U.S. ambassador to Syria was withdrawn after the 2005 killing of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, a crime that U.N. investigators have linked to Syrian officials. Syria's ambassador to the United States, Imad Moustapha, told CBS's "Face the Nation" on Sunday that Damascus would welcome direct talks with the United States, but the Bush administration has argued that direct talks with Syria would be pointless. Israel said Sunday that a multinational peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon is acceptable as a solution to the current Mideast crisis. The idea was broached by Israeli Defense Minister Amir Peretz during a meeting with German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier on Sunday, a ministry spokesman said. The force would have to be strong, unlike the current U.N. contingent in southern Lebanon, the spokesman said. Israel to distribute relief suppliesThe Israeli military announced Sunday it will distribute relief supplies to Lebanese citizens under the supervision of the Red Cross. The statement from the Israel Defense Forces said the mission was "in accordance with IDF policy to maintain the daily life of Lebanese civilian population not involved in terror activity." The humanitarian aid, to arrive on ships into Beirut's port, will be transferred to aid centers across Lebanon, the IDF said. Israel has barred the United Nations from sending relief supplies into southern Lebanon, where most of the country's estimated 500,000 internally displaced people are located, according to U.N. emergency relief coordinator Jan Egeland. The United Nations is able to take its convoys of humanitarian relief to Beirut, where some 150,000 people are displaced, Egeland told CNN's Nic Robertson. (Watch Syrians open homes to Lebanese -- 2:14) Egeland toured the rubble-littered streets of southern Beirut on Sunday and complained about the lack of safe routes for humanitarian relief supplies. "We do not have free access at the moment," he said. "We do not have security for our trucks. We do not have security for our relief people." The United Nations has bought 50 trucks and a ship that can travel from Cyprus to Beirut, then to the port city of Tyre, he said. On Monday, the United Nations will launch a $100 million fundraising campaign to help the Lebanese people, he said. Egeland will also negotiate the establishment of humanitarian corridors on Monday in hopes that trucks can head south quickly to bring people supplies. "There are people dying in hospitals because they do not have enough supplies, and it's our obligation to help now," he said. Other developmentsCNN's Paula Newton, Karl Penhaul, John Roberts, and John Vause contributed to this report.
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