* Conflict erupted on Monday, still no sign of end
* US and Arab diplomats pushing to restore calm
* President Biden sends envoy for talks
* Palestinians say 136 dead in Gaza, Israel reports 8 killed


Israel pummelled Gaza with air strikes with no sign yet of an end to the worst escalation in years after six days of conflict and amid a rising death toll.
At least 136 people have been killed in Gaza since hostilities erupted on Monday, including 34 children and 21 women, with 950 others wounded, Palestinian medics said.
Israel has reported eight dead, including a soldier on the Gaza border and six civilians, two of them children.
Overnight, the Israeli bombardment killed at least 12 Palestinians in Gaza, medics said, including a woman and four of her children who died when their house in a refugee camp was hit. Three others died, with others wounded, the medics said.
In Israel, thousands of Israelis ran for shelter as sirens sounded. One rocket launched from Gaza struck a residential building in the southern Israeli city of Beersheba, police said. Media said some people were hurt in the town dashing to cover.
In Gaza, Akram Farouq, 36, dashed out of his home with his family after a neighbour told him they had received a call from an Israeli officer warning that their building would be hit.
"We haven't slept all night because of the explosions, and now I am out in the street with my wife and children, who are weeping and trembling," said the 36-year-old.
Hamas launched Monday's rocket assault after tensions over a court case to evict several Palestinian families in East Jerusalem and in retaliation for Israeli police clashes with Palestinians near the city's al-Aqsa Mosque, Islam's third holiest site.
Regional and international diplomatic efforts have yet to show any signs of halting hostilities. Egypt, which has been leading regional efforts, sent ambulances across its border with Gaza to bring Palestinian casualties to Egyptian hospitals.
US President Joe Biden's envoy Hady Amr, deputy assistant secretary for Israel and Palestinian affairs, flew into Israel on Friday, before Sunday's UN Security Council's meeting.
Palestinian casualties now extend beyond Gaza. Palestinians, who each year on May 15 mark their displacement in the 1948 war around Israel's creation, have reported 11 killed in the occupied West Bank after protesters and Israeli forces clashed.
In Israel, from small towns bordering Gaza to Beersheba and metropolitan Tel Aviv, people now race for cover when they hear sirens wail, radio and TV warnings or red alert messages beeping on cell phones.
Hostilities between Israel and Gaza have been accompanied by violence in Israel's mixed communities of Jews and Arabs. Arab-owned shops vandalised and street fights have broken out. Israel's president, who has a largely ceremonial role, has warned of civil war.
Egypt had been pushing for a ceasefire on Friday so talks could start, two Egyptian security sources said. Cairo has been leaning on Hamas and pressing others, such as the United States, to secure an agreement with Israel.
The Egyptian and Jordanian foreign ministers discussed efforts to end the Gaza confrontation and to prevent "provocations" in Jerusalem, Egypt's Foreign Ministry said.
"The talks have taken a real and serious path on Friday," a Palestinian official said.
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