Stepping out of the Israeli armoured personnel carrier, the sound of gunfire was immediate.
So too was evidence of the destruction from four weeks of war inside Gaza.
Journalists living in the Palestinian territory have been reporting on the ground from the beginning, but this is the first time Israel has allowed media to enter with its troops to see their operation.
“There are gun battles all through the town since we have been here,” said an officer who was escorting a small group of reporters that included Sky News.
“We have seen a lot of Hamas, we have seen a lot of anti-tank missiles,” Lieutenant Colonel Gilad said.
Israeli ground troops pushed into Gaza a week ago after three weeks of aerial bombardments.
Commanders say the goal is to “destroy” Hamas and secure the release of more than 230 hostages who were seized by the militants during an unprecedented terrorist attack on 7 October against Israel that triggered the war.
“We are here to make Hamas pay for what he did to us,” the officer said.
We were brought to an Israeli position just over a mile from the border in the central Gaza area. Gaza City could be seen in the distance.
Standing on a patch of dirt ground, we were on the edge of an area of shattered concrete buildings.
Israeli warplanes had targeted this neighbourhood before the troops went in.
Lt Col Gilad said a number of Hamas fighters who took part in the October 7 attack had come from this area.
No sign of life now.
An Israeli flag even hung from the rubble.
Image: The scene inside Gaza
The troops have taken up a position in what they said had been a residential home that Hamas had used as an assembly point.
The officer said they had found an entrance next to the building to a network of tunnels that thread under the ground and are used by the militant group to attack Israeli targets.
He said there had also been rocket and missile launchers.
Image: An Israeli tank in Gaza
Israeli soldiers stood guard, rifles ready to shoot, from walls around the top floor of the house – which was an open roof.
As we walked through the building, heavy gunfire could be heard.
Image: Israeli troops in Gaza
A second officer said two suspicious individuals had been spotted and Israeli troops had opened fire.
He also described some of the operations that had been conducted, including targeting a network of underground tunnels used by Hamas to launch attacks on Israeli forces.
“We go to search a tunnel in the east section over there,” he said.
“We find two tunnels and now we’re going to destroy them.”
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0:42
Apparent strikes in northern Gaza
Lt Col Gilad said there were around 200 Hamas fighters in this area alone
His brigade was thought to have killed around 30 militants, but this mission is not without huge risk.
Three soldiers from 828 brigade – a fighting unit that combines tanks, infantry soldiers and combat engineers – have died since the ground offensive began.
Another seven were killed responding to the 7 October attack.
But Palestinian civilians are paying a very heavy price as Hamas operates among the population. The Hamas-controlled health ministry has said more than 9,000 people have been killed in Gaza since the start of the war, more than a third of them children.
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0:36
Israeli air strike hits ambulance convoy
Asked how the civilian death toll impacted him as a soldier, Lt Col Gilad said: “Personally, I can tell you I haven’t seen one civilian here. We have been here for a week. I haven’t seen civilians.
“They all know the message and all of them – most of them – went for the south. The IDF is doing all what it can to separate between the population and the militants of Hamas.”
He said that his troops were helping to open a new humanitarian corridor for the civilians who have not yet moved to the south of Gaza.
The soldiers regularly move locations – they carry everything on their backs.
Their current position is secure enough for the troops to make lunch. They heat up sweetcorn in cans and make tuna rolls.
One young soldier, sitting down, said he was proud to serve.
“We are taking care that 7 October will never happen again,” he said.
At least 30 people have been killed in the Syrian city of Sweida in clashes between local military groups and tribes, according to Syria’s interior ministry.
Officials say initial figures suggest around 100 people have also been injured in the city, where the Druze faith is one of the major religious groups.
The interior ministry said its forces will directly intervene to resolve the conflict, which the Reuters news agency said involved fighting between Druze gunmen and Bedouin Sunni tribes.
It marks the latest episode of sectarian violence in Syria, where fears among minority groups have increased since Islamist-led rebels toppled President Bashar al Assad in December, installing their own government and security forces.
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In March, Sky’s Stuart Ramsay described escalating violence within Syria
The violence reportedly erupted after a wave of kidnappings, including the abduction of a Druze merchant on Friday on the highway linking Damascus to Sweida.
Last April, Sunni militia clashed with armed Druze residents of Jaramana, southeast of Damascus, and fighting later spread to another district near the capital.
But this is the first time the fighting has been reported inside the city of Sweida itself, the provincial capital of the mostly Druze province.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) reports the fighting was centred in the Maqwas neighbourhood east of Sweida and villages on the western and northern outskirts of the city.
It adds that Syria’s Ministry of Defence has deployed military convoys to the area.
Western nations, including the US and UK, have been increasingly moving towards normalising relations with Syria.
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UK aims to build relationship with Syria
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Concerns among minority groups have intensified following the killing of hundreds of Alawites in March, in apparent retaliation for an earlier attack carried out by Assad loyalists.
That was the deadliest sectarian flare-up in years in Syria, where a 14-year civil war ended with Assad fleeing to Russia after his government was overthrown by rebel forces.
The city of Sweida is in southern Syria, about 24 miles (38km) north of the border with Jordan.
The man convicted of the murder of British student Meredith Kercher has been charged with sexual assault against an ex-girlfriend.
Rudy Guede, 38, was the only person who was definitively convicted of the murder of 21-year-old Ms Kercher in Perugia, Italy, back in 2007.
He will be standing trial again in November after an ex-girlfriend filed a police report in the summer of 2023 accusing Guede of mistreatment, personal injury and sexual violence.
Guede, from the Ivory Coast, was released from prison for the murder of Leeds University student Ms Kercher in 2021, after having served about 13 years of a 16-year sentence.
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Since last year – when this investigation was still ongoing – Guede has been under a “special surveillance” regime, Sky News understands, meaning he was banned from having any contact with the woman behind the sexual assault allegations, including via social media, and had to inform police any time he left his city of residence, Viterbo, as ruled by a Rome court.
Guede has been serving a restraining order and fitted with an electronic ankle tag.
The Kercher murder case, in the university city of Perugia, was the subject of international attention.
Ms Kercher, a 21-year-old British exchange student, was found murdered in the flat she shared with her American roommate, Amanda Knox.
The Briton’s throat had been cut and she had been stabbed 47 times.
Image: (L-R) Raffaele Sollecito, Meredith Kercher and Amanda Knox. File pic: AP
Ms Knox and her then-boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, were placed under suspicion.
Both were initially convicted of murder, but Italy’s highest court overturned their convictions, acquitting them in 2015.
The Israeli military says it missed its intended target after Gaza officials said 10 Palestinians – including six children – were killed in a strike at a water collection point.
Another 17 people were wounded in the strike on a water distribution point in Nuseirat refugee camp, said Ahmed Abu Saifan, an emergency physician at Al Awda Hospital.
The Israel Defence Forces (IDF) said it had intended to hit an Islamic Jihad militant but a “technical error with the munition” had caused the missile to fall “dozens of metres from the target”.
The IDF said the incident is under review, adding that it “works to mitigate harm to uninvolved civilians as much as possible” and “regrets any harm to uninvolved civilians”.
Image: A wounded child is treated after the strike on the water collection point. Pic: Reuters
Officials at Al Awda Hospital said it received 10 bodies after the Israeli strike on the water collection point and six children were among the dead.
Ramadan Nassar, who lives in the area, said around 20 children and 14 adults were lined up Sunday morning to fill up water.
When the strike occurred, everyone ran and some, including those who were severely injured, fell to the ground, he said.
Image: Blood stains are seen on containers at the water collection point. Pic: Reuters
In total, 19 people were killed in Israeli strikes in the Gaza Strip on Sunday, local health officials said.
Two women and three children were among nine killed after an Israeli strike on a home in the central town of Zawaida, officials at Al Aqsa Martyrs Hospital said.
Israel has claimed it hit more than 150 targets in the besieged enclave in the past day.
The latest strikes come after the Israel military opened fire near an aid centre in Rafah on Saturday. The Red Cross said 31 people were killed.
The IDF has said it fired “warning shots” near the aid distribution site but it was “not aware of injured individuals” as a result.
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Palestinians shot while seeking aid, says paramedic
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 58,000 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.
US President Donald Trump has said he is closing in on another ceasefire agreement that would see more hostages released and potentially wind down the war.
But after two days of talks this week with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, there were no signs of a breakthrough, as a new sticking point emerged over the deployment of Israeli troops during the truce.
Hamas still holds 50 hostages, with fewer than half of them believed to be alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefire agreements or other deals.