Gaza: Under the most intense Israeli bombardment in years, the people of Gaza took cover yesterday, some comforting children caught in the firing line, many saying the onslaught may bolster support for Israel's Hamas enemies.

"We are living in the middle of the battle zone. We wanted to flee the house but we've been trapped since last night," 21-year-old Rami Mohammad Ali said by telephone from his home in Jabalya town as explosions and gunfire thundered outside.

"Rockets and missiles are whistling by all the time and the building has been shaken by mines the Palestinians are setting off against the Israeli soldiers who are invading," he said. "My little nephews have been crying the whole time."

The area, in the north of the Gaza Strip, has been at the heart of ground combat between Israeli troops and Islamist fighters who have continued to fire rockets from around Jabalya into Israeli towns — the reason Israel says it is attacking.

Mohammad Ali, who lives with his brother's family and sister, said: "We've had a dilemma over which room is safer. In the end we all squeezed into the inner hallway, like sardines."

It is an experience Israelis point out has been shared by thousands of their citizens for months in border towns like Sderot and, since Hamas began using longer-range rockets, has now started to disrupt life in Ashkelon.

Palestinians and critics of Israeli tactics say the response to random rocket fire that has killed three Israelis in a year — the most recent on Wednesday — is disproportionate. In the past four days, 68 Gazans have been killed,.