The UK has slapped Israel with further sanctions and suspended trade talks with the country as it dramatically stepped up its response to violence against Palestinians in Gaza.
Foreign secretary David Lammy condemned Israel for a âmorally unjustifiableâ escalation in violence as he announced fresh measures to pile pressure on Benjamin Netanyahu â just hours after the UK, Canada and France warned they would take âconcrete actionsâ against the Middle Eastern nation.
Mr Lammy also said Israeli ambassador to the UK Tzipi Hotovely would be summoned to the Foreign Office, where she would be told the 11-week block on aid to Gaza had been âcruel and indefensibleâ.
The move came amid growing alarm over warnings from the UN that 14,000 Palestinian babies could die in the next 48 hours if action is not taken to put an end the humanitarian crisis, where people are severely malnourished.
Sir Keir Starmer had already joined French president Emmanuel Macron and Canadian PM Mark Carney in issuing a statement warning of substantive action if the Israeli government did not let aid into Gaza.

But over a fractious 90 minutes in the Commons on Tuesday, MPs from five political parties â Labour, the Tories, Lib Dems, Greens and SNP â told Mr Lammy that the government needs to go further and faster, including suspending arms sales to Israel and sanctioning ministers in the Netanyahu government.
Labour MP Melanie Ward, a parliamentary private secretary, asked the foreign secretary: âWhat is the red line? Gaza is out of time.â
The fresh sanctions were issued as violence escalated in Gaza following a renewed military offensive and continued restrictions on aid, which Mr Lammy said marked a âdark new phase in this conflictâ.
His words echoed Yair Golan, a former IDF general and leader now leader of the opposition Democrats in Israel, who warned: âIsrael is on the way to becoming a pariah state, like South Africa was, if we donât return to acting like a sane country.â
Speaking in the Commons, Mr Lammy condemned Netanyahuâs government for âplanning to drive Gazans from their homes into a corner of the strip to the south and permit them a fraction of the aid that they needâ.
His criticism came after Mr Netanyahuâs government said it would allow a âbasicâ amount of aid into Gaza to prevent a âhunger crisisâ from developing, acknowledging there is international pressure from Israelâs allies on the issue.
But, speaking in the Commons ahead of Mr Lammy, Sir Keir Starmer said it was âtotally and utterly inadequateâ, adding: âWe cannot allow the people of Gaza to starve.â
Hitting out at the âutterly intolerableâ situation, he said: âWeâre horrified by the escalation from Israel. We repeat our demand for a ceasefire as the only way to free the hostages.
âWe repeat our opposition to settlements in the West Bank, and we repeat our demand to massively scale-up humanitarian assistance into Gaza.â
His intervention comes a week after The Independent called on Sir Keir to “find his voice” and urge Donald Trump and all world leaders to call on Mr Netanyahu to end the aid blockade.
MPs from across the House shouted “genocide” as the foreign secretary added: “We must call this what it is. It is extremism. It is dangerous. It is repellent. It is monstrous and I condemn it in the strongest possible terms.”
As MPs from different parties demanded tougher measures, Labour MP Azfal Khan said: âConcrete steps are over due. When will you impose a full arms embargo on Israel and also recognise Palestine?â

In a passionate appeal, former Tory minister Kit Malthouse warned: âMany of this in this House have been urging this government to take action. We have tried anger and outrage and got nowhere. We have tried shaming ministers into action. Maybe we need to beg for the lives of those Palestinian children before they will trigger this action – whatever it might be.â
Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, now an independent MP, demanded to know what arms the UK is selling to Israel.
Labour MPs Andy Slaughter and Alex Sobel demanded sanctions on Israeli ministers. Similar demands came from SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn and Green co-leader Carla Denyer.
Lib Dem MP Vikki Slade said: âI would like to join colleagues in begging you, on my knees if we need to, please take more action.â
The measures announced on Tuesday, including financial restrictions and travel bans, cover prominent settler leader Daniella Weiss and two other individuals, as well as two illegal outposts and two organisations that the Foreign Office said supported, incited and promoted violence against Palestinian communities.
Responding to the suspension of trade talks, Israeli foreign ministry spokesman Oren Marmorstein said Britain was harming its own economy due to Labourâs fear of alienating pro-Gaza voters and an âanti-Israel obsessionâ.
âIf, due to anti-Israel obsession and domestic political considerations, the British government is willing to harm the British economy â that is its own prerogative,â he said.
He added that the sanctions in relation to the West Bank were âunjustified and regrettableâ.
âThe British Mandate ended exactly 77 years ago,â he said. âExternal pressure will not divert Israel from its path in defending its existence and security against enemies who seek its destruction.â
Ms Weiss, a target of the sanctions who the government described as a “high-profile extremist settler leader”, was a key focus of the recent Louis Theroux BBC documentary Settlers, which shone a light on the tactics of Israeli settlers in the Palestinian West Bank.