Syria's Western-backed opposition National Coalition has elected Hadi al-Bahra, chief negotiator at the Geneva peace talks, as its new president following a three-day meeting in Istanbul, the coalition said.
Bahra, a US-trained industrial engineer, will replace Ahmad Jarba, who has served the maximum two six-month terms.
Like Jarba, Bahra has close ties to Saudi Arabia and has lived there, the Reuters news agency reported.
"Hadi al-Bahra wins coalition presidency by 62 votes," a post on the Coalition's Facebook page said on Wednesday.
While designated as the main body representing the opposition by the US and other key powers, the National Coalition has little power inside Syria, where disparate armed groups outside its control hold ground.
Infighting within the opposition coalition has also undermined rebel efforts to take on forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, playing into the hands of rival, Sunni rebel groups that include foreign fighters.
US- and Russian-sponsored talks to end the three-year-old civil war stalled after two rounds in January and February, when the coalition and Assad's representatives failed to make substantive progress.
The Israeli authorities say more than 200 rockets have been fired into Israel from Gaza since Monday, with some reaching as far as Tel Aviv.
At least 550 sites have been hit by Israeli jets, including Gaza City, Beit Hanoun and Khan Younis.
An Israeli air strike killed seven Palestinian civilians on Thursday, including five children, in the largest death toll from a single attack since the start of the three-day offensive, the Palestinian Ministry of Health said.
Residents and medical officials said an Israeli air strike bombed at least two houses in a densely populated area near Khan Younis while residents were asleep, the Reuters news agency reported.
Bodies were pulled out of rubble from three or four homes including neighboring structures. Another 16 people
were also wounded in the attack, the ministry said.
Israeli tanks continued to patrol the border of Gaza, after Israel's cabinet mobilized 40,000 reservists.
Al Jazeera's John Hendren, reporting from Gaza City, said people are concerned that the next step is a ground invasion.
"Israel says it has thousands more targets it is willing to strike, which is hard to believe when you're in Gaza City. People are worried about more air strikes and a ground war."
UN meeting
Hospitals inside Gaza on Wednesday said they were overwhelmed with those injured in the Israeli raids. Egypt opened the Rafah crossings to help evacuate and treat the wounded.
Local media in Gaza said that one of the Israeli attacks on Wednesday targeted the house of a commander in the Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas. Casualties figures are unknown.
Another blew up the house of Hafez Hamad, a leader of the military wing of Islamic Jihad. He was killed along with at least four women and children, according to neighbors and hospital officials.
An 80-year-old woman was killed in an attack on Al-Mughraqa village in southern Gaza, according to reports.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will brief the Security Council at 1400 GMT on Thursday on the escalating Israeli and Palestinian hostilities, which he described as a "troubling and volatile" situation which was "on a knife edge".
Rwanda, which is president of the council for July, said there would be a public briefing by Ban and the Israeli and Palestinian UN ambassadors before closed-door consultations.
'Extreme' Israeli government
Khaled Meshaal, the political leader of Hamas, on Wednesday blamed the latest round of violence on the "extreme" Israeli government of Benjamin Netanyahu.
He urged Israelis to change their leadership or force their leaders to end their assaults on Gaza.
"Netanyahu will take you from disaster to disaster. They will give you nothing but defeat and destruction," he said. "You kill our people. The world is aware - the war has been forced upon us. We have not forced this war."
In response to Meshaal's speech, Naftali Bennett, Israel's economy minister and the leader of the right-wing Jewish Home party, said: "Meshaal was talking nonsense as usual".
"We are going to continue the pressure and we are going to expand our operation," he told Al Jazeera from Tel Aviv.
He said Israel would "haunt Hamas terror group until they stop shooting missiles".
On Wednesday, three rockets hit the southern city of Be'er Sheva, a salvo hit Tel Aviv during rush hour and one hit Hadera, about 100km from Gaza, the longest-range strike yet.
The Qassam Brigades said it fired M-75s, a locally-made rocket with an 80km range.
Five members of Hamas were also killed in a makeshift naval commando attack on a military base in Zikim, near the southern city of Israel.
Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian ambassador to the UN, said on Wednesday night: "We convey to the Security Council in the strongest terms our opposition to this outrageous aggression.
"We express the outrage of our people and demand the Security Council acts immediately to hold those responsible."
PHOTO CAPTION
A Palestinian whom medics said was wounded in an Israeli air strike, lies on a bed at a hospital in Gaza City July 9, 2014.
Aljazeera