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Rishi Sunak announced Monday that the UK was sending an additional £20 million of aid to help civilians in Gaza affected by the war between Israel and Hamas.
The announcement brings the amount pledged to Palestinian territories by Britain since Hamas's attack on Israel earlier this month to £30million, after £10 million was made available last week.
A young Israeli boy has sketched his recollection of a deadly Hamas attack on his family home in a heartbreaking hand-drawn picture.
The pencil drawing, made by a young child who is currently sheltering in the central city of Bnei Brak near Tel Aviv, depicts the attack on his family home in Netivot, six miles from the border with Gaza, on October 7.
The foreground of the picture shows two balaclava-wearing men, one of whom is pointing through a door with a gun, while the other has his face turned to a brick wall.
In the top-right corner, the boy's father was drawn trying to escape through a hatch in the ceiling of the building, only to find a Hamas attacker waiting for him.
The background, meanwhile, appears to show tall buildings in the city being bombarded with rockets.
Read our full report HERE.
A deputy commander in Iran's Revolutionary Guard has hinted the nation would hit Israel with a missile 'if it is necessary'.
Ali Fadavi said the Revolutionary Guard would 'not hesitate' in hitting the northern Israeli port city of Haifa.
Iran International reported Fadavi said: 'Some consider a direct missile attack on Haifa to be the most practical course of action. We will carry out this task without hesitation if it is necessary and required.'
Fadavi added: 'However, I am not the one who determines the assignment.'
Israeli soldiers are patrolling an area near the northern border with Lebanon today as officials continue to evacuate dozens of towns from the north of Israel.
Lebanon's heavily armed Hezbollah group and Israel have been exchanging fire on an increasingly frequent basis along the border in the worst escalation since the two sides fought a war in 2006.
U.S. troops in Syria were targeted by drones but there were no injuries, two U.S. officials said on Monday, the latest in a series of attacks against U.S. forces in the Middle East.
The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the attack took place at Al-Tanf base, near Syria's borders with Iraq and Jordan.
Israel has unleashed a new weapon on Hamas positions in Gaza for the first time - a highly powerful and precise mortar munition known as the Iron Sting.
Read our full report HERE.
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer insisted Gaza needs 'rapid, safe, unhindered and regular' aid.
The UK will deploy RAF and Royal Navy assets to monitor the situation in Israel and Palestine, the Prime Minister said.
Sunak told the Commons: 'We are all determined to prevent escalation, that is why I am deploying RAF and Royal Navy assets, monitoring threats to regional security and supporting humanitarian efforts.'
The explosion at Al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza City on Tuesday was most likely caused by a missile fired from within Gaza, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said on Monday.
The Prime Minister told the House of Commons: 'As I indicated last week, we have taken care to look at all the evidence currently available.
'I can now share our assessment with the House. On the basis of the deep knowledge and analysis of our intelligence and weapons experts, the British Government judges that the explosion was likely caused by a missile or part of one that was launched from within Gaza towards Israel.
'The misreporting of this incident had a negative effect in the region, including on a vital US diplomatic effort, and the tensions here at home.'
Palestinian officials said 471 people were killed in the blast at Al-Ahli al-Arabi Hospital on Tuesday. Gaza's health ministry blamed an Israeli air strike, while Israel said the blast was caused by a failed rocket launch by militants.
Read the full story by our Political Editor James Tapsfield HERE.
Family members of the two US hostages released by Hamas last Friday say they are relieved but struggling to grapple with their feelings as so many others still remain captive.
The Israeli army said Monday it had 'thwarted' an attack from Gaza by two drones that was claimed by Hamas.
'Two UAVs were identified crossing from the Gaza Strip into Israeli territory' at Nir Oz and Ein HaBesor near the border, the army said. 'Both UAVs were thwarted,' a statement added.
Israeli media said a helicopter shot down one drone and the other was hit by a ground-fired missile.
Hamas, which used drones in their October 7 attack on Israel, said on social media that 'Israeli military posts' were the targets of the latest raid.
The US has advised Israeli officials that a delay in a possible ground offensive in Gaza would allow more time for the U.S. to work with its regional partners to release more hostages, according to a U.S. official familiar with Biden administration's thinking on the matter.
The official, who requested anonymity to discuss the private discussions, said it was unclear how much the argument will 'move the needle' on Israeli thinking.
The official noted that Qatar's help in mediating with Hamas was able to win the release of two captives, Judith and Natalie Raanan.
The process that led to their release - just two of the more than the 222 people believed taken hostage in Israel in the Oct. 7 attacks - started soon after the Hamas operation.
The official said arranging for the release of the Raanans 'took longer to come together than folks really realise.'
Israel has released a snippet of unedited footage taken from the bodycam of a Hamas gunman amid the ruthless October 7 attacks on unsuspecting civilians.
The clip showed how the gunman, brandishing his AK-47 assault rifle, ordered a pair of Israelis driving slowly along the road to stop their car.
Without giving the driver a second to comply, the gunman immediately starts blasting bullets into the vehicle from mere feet away, and the passengers can be seen recoiling from the rounds in the cabin as the car rolls past.
The release of the footage was announced by government spokesman Eylon Levy to counter what it says is a 'Holocaust denial-like phenomenon' amid backlash over Israel's airstrikes of the Gaza Strip.
Read our full report by clicking HERE.
More than 19,000 people have been displaced in Lebanon amid an uptick in tensions between Israel and Hezbollah at the country's southern border, figures released Monday by a United Nations agency showed.
Medics at the Al-Shifa Hospital, Gaza's largest, have warned that they may have to stop operating as they will run out of fuel in the next 48 hours.
Dr Mohammad Abu Salmiya – the director general of Al-Shifa hospital - said the hospital has yet to receive any UN aid amid the total Israeli blockade of Gaza.
The UN said the lives of at least 120 newborn babies in incubators in Gaza's hospitals are at risk.
Riham Jafari, Advocacy and Communications Coordinator at ActionAid Palestine, said: 'Hospitals are relying on fuel-powered generators for their electricity. Fuel and medical supplies should be provided now to Gaza.
'Children, patients, babies in incubators and pregnant women will lose thier lives if fuel is not provided to hospitals in Gaza.'
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The head of the neonatal unit in Nasser Hospital in the southern city of Khan Younis said it will run out of fuel within 48 hours.
Dr. Hatem Edhair said there are eight babies in the intensive care unit and 10 others in the neonatal department.
'Half of these children are on CPAP (pressurized air) machines and oxygen machines,' he said Monday. 'If the hospital runs out of fuel, half of these babies will die in less than 24 hours.'
Doctors treating premature babies across Gaza have warned that at least 130 are at 'grave risk' across six neonatal units because of worsening fuel shortages.
The fuel shortages are caused by the Israeli blockade of Gaza, which started - along with airstrikes - after Hamas militants attacked Israeli towns on Oct. 7.
'We are working around the clock,' Edair said. 'We need to save these babies.'
Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammed Shtayyeh on Monday accused Western nations of giving Israel a "licence to kill" in its war against the Gaza Strip's Islamist rulers Hamas.
More pictures are emerging from the Gaza Strip following Israeli airstrikes today.
On a day when Israel's army reported more than 300 new strikes within 24 hours, Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry said the death toll had surged above 5,000, more than 2,000 of them children.
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A former European Union diplomat filmed himself paragliding over Gaza and saying 'once we have a free Palestine, you can do the same thing' - three months before Hamas terrorists flew into Israel to carry out a bloody invasion.
Israeli forces have debuted a weapons system dubbed the 'Iron Sting', sharing video of it being used to destroy Hamas rocket launchers as they step up aerial assaults and raids on terrorist squads in Gaza ahead of a planned ground invasion.
British-Israeli Yosef Malachi Guedalia, 22, was killed in Hamas's attacks on Israel, his family has confirmed today.
Guedalia saved at least one seriously wounded civilian from Kfar Aza before repeatedly returning to the besieged kibbutz to help those caught up by the Hamas raiders.
Guedalia's death was first reported by The Times last night, with a family member telling the newspaper he was a 'very gentle, sweet person'. 'He would blend seamlessly into any new group he joined. People loved him and he was accepted by everyone.'
His family today confirmed to the BBC that he had been killed by Hamas terrorists in the 7 October attack.
His brother Asher said he was 'always happy, there was no bad in him'.
Asher told the BBC. 'He literally saved people minutes before he got shot. He acted with heroism and determination, he continued to fight and didn't think of himself or hesitate…He went in to rescue as many citizens as possible before they got murdered in their homes and to kill as many terrorists as he could.'
Israeli strikes have killed at least 5,087 people in Gaza since war erupted on October 7, triggered by massive attacks on Israel, Hamas officials in the Palestinian enclave said Monday.
Some 2,055 children and 1,119 women are among the dead, while 15,273 people have been injured in the relentless bombardments, the Hamas-run health ministry in the Gaza Strip.
It said 436 Palestinians - including 182 children - have been killed in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza in the past 24 hours.
Humza Yousaf's mother-in-law has said she is living through 'torture' in Gaza, the First Minister said.
Speaking to journalists from flood-hit Brechin on Monday, Mr Yousaf was seen to step away from cameras to take a call, which he later said was from Elizabeth El-Nakla.
Mrs El-Nakla and her husband Maged - the parents of Mr Yousaf's wife Nadia - travelled to Gaza to visit family when hostilities flared up.
'They're really living in a situation that my mother-in-law describes as torture,' he said.
'The whole night there will be missiles, rocket fire, drones - they don't know whether they are going to make it from one night to the next.
'They're down to six bottles of clean drinking water in a house of 100 people including a two-month-old baby, she tells me.'
As we reported earlier, Israel said its ground forces mounted limited raids to fight Hamas terrorists and that air strikes were being focused on sites where the gunmen were assembling to attack any wider Israeli invasion.
IDF spokesman Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari has now revealed more details on those ground raids.
As we reported earlier, Israel claims Hamas fighters were carrying instructions on how to make chemical weapons when they launched their horrifying October 7 attack on Israeli border villages.
Read our full report here.
Israel's armed forces have massed tens of thousands of soldiers, tanks, heavy armour and artillery along the Gaza border ahead of a much-anticipated ground assault that aims to crush Hamas in retaliation for the group's ruthless October 7 attacks.
On the face of it, the conflict looks to be a considerable mismatch.
Israel boasts one of the most advanced militaries in the world, with state of the art equipment and technology.
By contrast, Hamas is thought to have as many as 40,000 fighters, all of whom are crammed into Gaza, a small 140-square-mile strip of land home to more than 2.3 million people - with limited training and resources.
But military experts are reluctant to suggest an armed Israeli incursion into Gaza will be a walk in the park.
With this in mind, MailOnline breaks down the military capabilities of both sides ahead of Israel's ground assault. Read more here.
IDF spokesman Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said Israeli forces had wiped out eight terrorist cells in Lebanon over the past 24 hours and more than 20 since the start of the war.
Hagari said seven of the positions were struck before Hezbollah terrorists managed to fire anti-tank missiles and rockets
An aid convoy entered the besieged Gaza Strip on Monday via the Rafah border crossing, the third since war erupted on October 7.
More than a dozen lorries crossed Rafah, adding to a previous total of 34 trucks that had entered Gaza on Saturday and Sunday according to an Egyptian Red Cross official.
The United Nations says at least 100 trucks a day are needed to provide the basic needs of Gaza's 2.4 million inhabitants as fighting triggered by a massive Hamas onslaught rages on, with thousands killed already.
The situation at al-Shifa hospital, one of Gaza's biggest, is so dire that medics are being forced to improvise without supplies, medics say.
China views the situation in Gaza as 'very serious' with the risk of large-scale ground conflict growing and because the conflict has begun to spill over in the region, the country's Middle East envoy said.
Suella Braverman will today meet with the Metropolitan Police commissioner to express her fury after the force failed to crackdown on pro-Hamas protesters in London over the weekend.
Read our full report here.
Israel said it had carried out 'limited' ground raids into Gaza overnight to target Hamas gunmen and search for the 220 hostages.
Israeli president Isaac Herzog told Sky News that Hamas were carrying instructions on how to make chemical weapons when they carried out their massacre on October 7.
Israel's Defence Forces have published what they claim is proof of Hamas rocket launch sites nestled amid mosques, schools and nurseries in Gaza.
European Union foreign ministers are meeting today to discuss ways to help vital aid get into Gaza, particularly fuel, after two convoys entered over the weekend.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday warned that the nation was in a 'do-or-die double battle' to 'erase Hamas' in Gaza while trying to hold back against Hezbollah firing missiles from Lebanon
The Israeli military said it had destroyed two 'terrorist cells' inside Lebanon in an overnight strike.
The Israeli military said on Monday it had struck 320 Hamas targets throughout Gaza over the past day.
Good morning to our MailOnline readers. Here's a recap of what's happened in the Israel-Hamas conflict in the last few hours.