After news of the deaths emerged, Rice telephoned Lebanese Prime Minister
Fuad Saniora and said she would stay in Jerusalem to continue work on a peace
package, rather than make a planned visit to Beirut on Sunday. Saniora said he
told her not to come.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who earlier supported the US stance, said
Washington must work faster to put together the broader deal it seeks.
But Saniora said talk of a larger peace package must wait until the firing
stops.
"We will not negotiate until the Israeli war stops shedding the blood of
innocent people," he told a gathering of foreign diplomats. But he underlined
that Lebanon stands by ideas for disarming Hezbollah that it put forward earlier
this week and that Rice praised.
He took a tough line and hinted that any Hezbollah response to the airstrike
at the village of Qana was justified.
"As long as the aggression continues there is response to be exercised," he
said, praising Hezbollah's leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah for his "sacrifices."
Lebanon demanded an international probe.
Hezbollah said on its Al-Manar television that it will retaliate, vowing,
"The massacre at Qana will not go unanswered." It hit northern Israel on Sunday
with 157 rockets - the highest one-day total during the offensive - with
one Israeli moderately wounded and 12 others lightly hurt, medics said.
Iraq's top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, demanded an
immediate cease-fire in Lebanon, warning the Muslim world will "not forgive"
nations that stand in the way of stopping the fighting.
Lebanese anger was heightened by memories of a 1996 Israeli artillery
bombardment that hit a UN base in Qana, killing more than 100 Lebanese who had
taken refuge from fighting. That attack sparked an international outcry that
forced a halt to an Israeli offensive.
In Beirut, some 5,000 protesters gathered downtown, at one point attacking a
UN building and burning American flags. They shouted "Destroy Tel Aviv!" and
chanted for Hezbollah's ally Syria to hit Israel.
In the Gaza Strip, Palestinians stormed a UN compound and smashed its windows
Sunday during a protest against Israeli airstrikes. Security officials fired
into the air to disperse them.
Images of children's bodies tangled in the building's ruins, being carried
away on blankets or wrapped in plastic sheeting were aired on Arab news
networks.
In Qana, Khalil Shalhoub was helping pull out the dead until he saw his
brother's body taken out on a stretcher.
"Why are they killing us? What have we done?" he screamed.
Israel said Hezbollah had fired more than 40 rockets from Qana before the
airstrike, including several from near the building that was bombed.
At a news conference in Tel Aviv Sunday night, military officers showed
aerial footage taken two days ago of Katyusha rockets being fired near houses in
Qana, and of a Katyusha launcher firing missiles and then being driven into Qana
and hidden inside a house.
Foreign Ministry official Gideon Meir accused Hezbollah of "using their own
civilian population as human shields."
Israel said residents of Qana had been warned to leave. But Shalhoub and
others in the village said residents were too terrified to take the road out of
the village.
More than 750,000 Lebanese have fled their homes in the fighting. But many
thousands more are still believed holed up in the south, taking refuge in
schools, hospitals or basements of apartment buildings amid the fighting ¡ª many
of them too afraid to flee.
Lebanese Defense Minister Elias Murr disputed allegations that Hezbollah was
firing missiles from Qana.
"What do you expect Israel to say? Will it say that it killed 40 children and
women?" he told Al-Jazeera television.
Before dawn Sunday, Israeli ground forces backed by heavy artillery fire
crossed the border and clashed with Hezbollah guerrillas in the Taibeh Project
area, about two miles inside Lebanon. Hezbollah said two of its fighters were
killed. Eight Israeli soldiers were wounded.
Some 460 Lebanese, mostly civilians, had been killed in the campaign through
Saturday, according to the Health Ministry - before the attacks on Qana.
Thirty-three Israeli soldiers have died, and Hezbollah rocket attacks on Israel
have killed 18 civilians, Israel said.