These pictures show how the war between Israel and Hamas has escalated since the shocking surprise attack a week ago.
Hamas stormed through towns in southern Israel, after breaching the border barrier with Gaza in multiple locations.
The attackers gunned down civilians and abducted some 150 people – including men, women and children – in the assault on 7 October.
Israeli forces have since put Gaza, home to 2.3 million Palestinians, under a total siege and launched round-the-clock airstrikes that have levelled entire city blocks.
Image: Israeli police evacuate a woman and child from a site hit by a rocket in Ashkelon, Israel. Pic: AP
Image: Emergency personnel work to extinguish a fire after rockets are launched from Gaza, in Ashkelon, Israel
Image: Rockets are fired towards Israel from Gaza. Pic: AP
Image: A woman stands in a damaged room after rockets were launched from Gaza, in Ashkelon, Israel
Image: A building ablaze following rocket attacks from Gaza, in Tel Aviv, Israel
Image: Palestinians celebrate by a destroyed Israeli tank at the Gaza fence east of Khan Younis. Pic: AP
Gaza has been sealed off from food, water and medical supplies as well as placed under a virtual total power blackout.
Palestinian militants have fired thousands of rockets into Israel since the conflict erupted.
Image: Israeli soldiers work to secure residential areas following a mass infiltration by Hamas gunmen from the Gaza Strip, in Sderot, southern Israel
Image: People try to extinguish fire on cars following a rocket attack from Gaza in Ashkelon, Israel. Pic: AP
Image: Explosions over Gaza City. Pic: AP
Image: Rockets are fired towards Israel from Gaza. Pic: AP
Image: Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepts rockets launched from Gaza
Image: Palestinians inspect the ruins of Watan Tower, which was destroyed in Israeli strikes, in Gaza City
On Saturday, the Gaza Health Ministry said 2,215 people had been killed there, including 724 children and 458 women.
The Hamas assault killed more than 1,300 Israelis – most of them civilians – and roughly 1,500 Hamas militants were killed during the fighting, the Israeli government said.
Image: Rockets are fired from Gaza towards Israel
Image: Israeli soldiers scan an area while sirens sound as rockets from Gaza are launched towards Israel, near Sderot, southern Israel
Image: Smoke rises following Israeli strikes in Gaza
Image: Smoke and flames rise following Israeli strikes in Gaza
Image: Rockets are fired from Gaza towards Israel
Image: Heavy bombardment in Gaza. Pic: AP
A week on from the wide-ranging Hamas attack, Palestinians scrambled to flee northern Gaza after Israel ordered nearly half the population to flee south and carried out limited ground forays into the territory.
Israel renewed calls on social media and in leaflets dropped from the air for some one million residents to move south, while Hamas urged people to stay inside their homes.
Image: Israeli soldiers arrive at Sderot, a town close to Gaza. Pic: AP
Image: Smoke rises following Israeli airstrikes in Gaza City. Pic: AP
Image: A Palestinian walks through the destruction by Israeli bombing in Gaza City. Pic: AP
Image: Destruction in the Karama neighbourhood following Israeli bombing in Gaza City. Pic: AP
Image: An Israeli mobile artillery unit fires a shell from southern Israel towards Gaza. Pic: AP
Image: Smoke rises following an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City. Pic: AP
Israel’s raids into Gaza on Friday were the first indication troops had entered the territory since it began its bombardment in retaliation for the Hamas massacre.
Israel has called up some 360,000 reservists and massed troops and tanks along the border ahead of an expected land offensive as the war was set to escalate yet again.
“We will destroy Hamas,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed on Friday night.
Image: Israel’s Iron Dome intercepts missiles launched from Gaza. Pic: Mohammed Saber/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Image: Flares, fired from the Israeli side, burn in the sky as seen from Ramyah near the Lebanese-Israeli border
Image: Israeli soldiers on a tank near the Israel-Gaza border. Pic: AP
Image: Israeli soldiers take position near the border with Gaza
Image: Palestinians evacuate a wounded youth after an Israeli airstrike in Rafah, Gaza. Pic: AP
Image: An Israeli soldier steps over personal belongings near a home in Kibbutz Beeri in southern Israel
Image: Mourners join the funeral for Reuters journalist Issam Abdallah, who was killed in Israeli shelling in Lebanon
But that $1trn figure (or £761,910,000,000) – which is both one thousand billion and one million million – is almost impossible to imagine for most people.
Even so, we have drilled down into the numbers and examined what you can do with a trillion US dollars – and it turns out, quite a lot.
Show me the money
Laid end to end, a trillion one-dollar bills would cover a distance of approximately 156 billion metres.
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That could wrap around the equator 3,890 times, easily reach the sun from Earth (around 149.6 million km) or loop from Earth to the moon 405 times.
That many one-dollar notes could cover a massive area (roughly 10,339 km squared), meaning you could blanket nearly all of Lebanon or Jamaica in bills.
Spend it on sport
You could splash out on virtually all of the world’s major sporting leagues.
The clubs which make up the Premier League are relatively cheap ($30bn), and even when snapping up the UEFA Champions League clubs and the big five top divisions of Spain, Italy, Germany, and France, there’s still $858bn left in the kitty.
The four major US sports leagues for ice hockey, baseball, basketball, and American football (NFL, NBA, MLB and NHL) have a rough valuation of $544bn, according to Sportico.
But then add the IPL cricket league ($120bn) and F1 ($23.1bn) and Musk still has change from an estimated total spend of $829.7bn.
Image: Elon Musk is in the money if he hits targets set by Tesla’s shareholders. File pic: AP
Take over Tesla’s rivals
He could buy up the top 15 largest publicly traded automakers (excluding Tesla) by market capitalisation.
They would include firms like Japan’s Toyota ($275bn), Chinese automaker BYD ($120bn), and luxury brands like Ferrari ($81bn) and Mercedes-Benz ($62bn), as well as BMW ($52bn), Volkswagen ($50bn) and Ford ($48bn).
But there would still be a little change left over; the total bill would be an eye-watering $992bn.
Buy up San Diego
He could buy up every single residential property in San Diego County – valued at a total of $1trn. Seattle is just slightly out of reach at $1.1trn, according to recent data from real estate firm Zillow.
But if he wanted to buy big – there is always Tennessee. The total value of homes in the US state is estimated at $957bn. Or there is Maryland, which at $1.01trn could be bought if he can find a little more cash behind the sofa.
Sadly, he would struggle to scoop up London’s entire housing stock, which in February was valued at just under £2trn ($2.53trn), according to agents Savills.
Cities like New York ($4.6trn) and Los Angeles ($3.9trn) are also not within his budget, hosting America’s most expensive residential markets.
Do something charitable?
There is always the possibility Musk could follow in the footsteps of Microsoft founder Bill Gates, who intends to give away 99% of his vast fortune over the next 20 years.
He could give every single man, woman, and child in the US a share of his cash pile. They would receive approximately $2,917.32 (£2,223.29), based on a population estimate of 342.7 million.
Although it would be roughly $14,348.79 (£10,935.20) for every person (roughly 69.6 million) in the UK.
If he wanted to give the entire globe an early Christmas present, then based on the rough world population estimate of 8.2 billion, everyone would receive $121.80 (£92.87).
Pay off the credit card
With $1trn, he could instantly rewrite history and erase debt interest payments and the government debt from dozens of the world’s sovereign nations.
Or Musk could wipe out the debts of Singapore ($1trn) or South Korea ($0.99trn) in one go, according to figures from the International Monetary Fund’s latest World Economic Outlook (Oct 2025).
But when it comes to the biggest debt-laden countries, $1trn would not even touch the sides.
The US has $38.3trn of government debt (just over one third of the total global debt pile) while the UK has a modest $4.1trn.
Prince Harry has apologised to Canada for wearing a Los Angeles Dodgers cap while attending a World Series game against the Toronto Blue Jays.
The Duke of Sussex and his wife, Meghan, were pictured at the baseball game last Tuesday, which Toronto ultimately lost to the Dodgers in a seventh-game decider on Sunday.
The prince joked to Canadian broadcaster CTV that he wore the Dodgers merchandise “under duress”.
He said it felt like “the polite thing to do” after being invited to the dugout by the team’s owner.
“Firstly, I would like to apologise to Canada for wearing it,” he said.
“Secondly, I was under duress. There wasn’t much choice.”
“When you’re missing a lot of hair on top, and you’re sitting under floodlights, you’ll take any hat that’s available,” he joked.
“Game five, game six, game seven, I was Blue Jays throughout. Now that I’ve admitted that, it’s going to be pretty hard for me to return back to Los Angeles.”
The royal couple, who met in 2016 and married in 2018, moved to California in 2020 – after initially setting up home in Canada. They live in Montecito with their children Archie, six, and Lilibet, four.
Harry’s father, the King, is the head of state of Canada – a Commonwealth nation.
Meghan has previously shown her support for the Blue Jays, a nod to her former home city.
The former actress lived in Toronto while filming the legal drama Suits. She appeared in more than 100 episodes.
She and Harry also spent time together there during the early stages of their relationship.
James Watson, co-discoverer of the double-helix shape of DNA, has died at the age of 97.
James D. Watson shared a 1962 Nobel Prize with Francis Crick and Maurice Wilkins for discovering that deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA.
Their co-discovery of the twisted-ladder structure of DNA in 1953 helped revolutionise medicine, crime-fighting, genealogy and ethics.
The discovery turned him into a legendary figure, but later in life he faced condemnation for offensive remarks, including saying black people are less intelligent than white people.
This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly.