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
An aid worker in Gaza has told Sky News the food situation in the enclave is “absolutely desperate” and “the worst it’s ever been”.
Her comments to chief presenter Mark Austincome amid fresh outcry over aid restrictions, with the UK joining 24 other countries to urge an immediate end to the war.
It also comes as at least 12 more Palestinians were killed and dozens wounded when tanks shelled a tent encampment in western Gaza City, according to health authorities.
Medics, speaking early on Tuesday, said two shells were fired at tents housing displaced people from tanks positioned north of the Shati camp.
Israel hasn’t yet commented on the reports.
Rachael Cummings, humanitarian director for Save The Children, spoke to Sky News from Deir al Balah, a city where tens of thousands of people have sought refuge during repeated waves of mass displacement.
More on Gaza
Related Topics:
She said: “One of my colleagues said to me yesterday, ‘We are all walking together towards death’. And this is the situation now for people in Gaza.
“There is no food for their children, it’s absolutely desperate here.”
Image: Palestinians gather to receive food from a charity kitchen. Pic: Reuters
“The markets are empty,” she said. “People may even have cash in their pockets yet they cannot buy bread [or] vegetables.
“My team have said to me, ‘There’s nothing in my house to feed my children, my children are crying all day, every day.”
Israel launched a ground assault on southern and eastern Deir al Balah for the first time on Monday after having issued an evacuation order.
Local medics said at least three people were killed when houses and mosques were hit by tank shelling.
Sources told Reuters news agency that Israel believes some of the hostages kidnapped by Hamas in October 2023 could be in the area.
Image: Smoke rises during strikes amid the Israeli operation in Deir al Balah. Pic: Reuters
Ms Cummings’s remarks came as the UK and 24 other nations issued a joint statement calling for a ceasefire.
The statement criticised aid distribution in Gaza, which is being managed by a US and Israel-backed organisation, Gaza Health Foundation (GHF).
“The Israeli government’s aid delivery model is dangerous, fuels instability and deprives Gazans of human dignity,” the joint statement said.
The 25 countries also called for the “immediate and unconditional release” of hostages captured by Hamas during the 7 October 2023 attacks.
Lammy promises £40m for Gaza
Foreign Secretary David Lammy has promised £40m for humanitarian assistance in Gaza.
He told MPs: “We are leading diplomatic efforts to show that there must be a viable pathway to a Palestinian state involving the Palestinian Authority, not Hamas, in the security and governance of the area.
“Hamas can have no role in the governance of Gaza, nor use it as a launchpad for terrorism.”
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
2:53
Lammy: ‘There must be a viable pathway to a Palestinian state’
Addressing the foreign secretaries’ joint written statement, charity worker Liz Allcock – who works for Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP) in Gaza – told Sky News: “While we welcome this, there have been statements in the past 21 months and nothing has changed.
“In fact, things have only got worse. And every time we think it can’t get worse, it does.”
Follow The World
Listen to The World with Richard Engel and Yalda Hakim every Wednesday
“Without a reversal of the siege, the lack of supplies, the constant bombardment, the forced displacement, the killing, the militarisation of aid, we are going to collapse as a humanitarian response,” she said.
“And this would do a grave injustice to the 2.2 million people we’re trying to serve.
“An immediate and permanent ceasefire, and avenues for accountability in line with international law, is the minimum people here deserve.”
The war in Gaza started in response to Hamas’s attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, which killed 1,200 people and saw about 250 taken hostage.
More than 59,000 Palestinians have since been killed, with more than half being women and children, according to Gaza’s health ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count.
At least 19 people have died after a Bangladesh air force plane crashed into a college campus, the military said.
The aircraft crashed into the campus of Milestone School and College in Uttara, in the northern area of the capital Dhaka, where students were taking tests or attending regular classes.
The pilot was one of the people killed, and, according to the military, 164 were injured in the incident.
The Bangladeshmilitary’s public relations department added that the aircraft was an F-7 BGI, and had taken off at 1.06pm local time before crashing shortly after.
Video shows fire and smoke rising from the crash site, with hundreds looking on.
Image: Pics: Reuters
The cause of the crash was not immediately clear.
Bengali-language daily newspaper Prothom Alo said that most of the injured were students with burn injuries.
Image: Pics: Reuters
Citing the duty officer at the fire service control room, Prothom Alo also reported that the plane had crashed on the roof of the college canteen.
Rafiqa Taha, a 16-year-old student at the school who was not present at the time of the crash, told the Associated Press that the school has around 2,000 students.
“I was terrified watching videos on TV,” she added. “My God! It’s my school.”
Donald Trump is clearly seething over the term ‘TACO’ (Trump always chickens out) – a phrase that has characterised financial market trading over the past few months.
It suggests that for all the president’s bluster and threats during his on-off trade war to date, he rarely follows through.
When asked by a reporter about TACO in late May, as his “liberation day” escalation remained on pause, he declared it a “nasty” question and said he wanted negotiations.
Mr Trump wants a deal but to effectively bully America’s trading partners into agreeing better terms.
It’s a playbook that has defined his time in the White House and, as things stand, more than 20 nations and territories, including Japan and South Korea, face heightened tariffs of up to 40% on their exports to the US from 1 August.
Financial markets don’t really believe it. Stock markets, for example, are still hovering near or at record levels in both the US and in Europe. The FTSE 100 closed above 9,000 points for the first time on Monday evening. TACO is ingrained in those values.
More on Donald Trump
Related Topics:
But are markets in for a shock, especially when it comes to the fight with America’s single largest trading partner, the European Union? It was created, Mr Trump has previously claimed, to “screw” the United States.
It’s fair to say there was great optimism in the EU earlier this month that a deal, similar to that agreed between the US and UK, was looming to avert the worst of a threatened 30% baseline tariff from 1 August.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
2:02
Explained: The US-UK trade deal
But the mood music in Brussels changed at the back end of last week and now EU diplomats are even briefing that a broader range of retaliation measures is being considered beyond additional tariffs on US goods.
The seriousness of this fight should not be underestimated.
EU figures show trade in goods and services between the bloc and the US account for almost a third of all global trade, at a value in 2024 alone of €1.68trn (£1.45trn).
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
1:45
Trump ‘reigniting global trade war’
EU Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic has warned that a 30% tariff would “practically prohibit” the bloc’s transatlantic trade, according to remarks via diplomats reported by the Reuters news agency.
We’re told that, even if time runs out, a truce could theoretically be agreed soon after 1 August.
Much will depend on the EU’s response.
Does it go down the route taken by the UK and not retaliate, pending the conclusion of talks?
There is growing pressure on Brussels to call Mr Trump’s bluff.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
1:40
Trump tariff threats all ‘bluster’
The EU has a package of tariffs on €21bn of US goods ready to go from 6 August. An additional package is yet to be finalised.
France is demanding US services are hit too, with even Germany now saying such an escalation should be considered.
The so-called “anti-coercion” instrument, as it’s known, would also potentially allow the bloc to limit US companies’ access to financial service markets in the EU.
So what happens after 1 August could be even more explosive.
But there is every reason to believe that a tit-for-tat escalation is unlikely, at least for long.
The very reason Donald Trump rowed back on his “liberation day” tariffs in April, allowing 90 days for talks, was likely the dire financial market reaction that followed news of the widespread duties.
You have a president demanding interest rate cuts (at a time when inflation is on the rise due to the impact of tariffs) in a bid to boost flagging economic growth.
Mr Trump says his trade war is all about boosting US manufacturing jobs but, at the end of the day, no powerbase of voters is going to accept a threat to the value of their investments for long.
No big US company will stand by and see its sales suffer.