More than 250 bodies found at site of Israeli Supernova festival - rescuers
Read more: How Hamas staged lightning assault no one thought possible. For the basics: What is Hamas?
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Read more: How Hamas staged lightning assault no one thought possible. For the basics: What is Hamas?
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Edited by Tiffany Wertheimer and James FitzGerald
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The conflict is dangerous and fast-moving - Sunak
UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has described the situation in Israel as "dangerous and fast-moving", saying that nobody "wants to see any regional escalation".
Sunak tells reporters he's "unequivocal" that Hamas and its supporters are "fully responsible for this appalling act of terror, for the murder of civilians and the kidnapping of innocent people including children".
He says he told Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu the UK government would do "everything we can to help" and that the country "stands steadfast with Israel, including its right to self-defence".
The PM adds that the UK Foreign Office is in close contact with its Israeli counterpart over the status of British nationals there.
Crisis talks at the UN
Nada Tawfik
Reporting from UN headquarters, New York City
Here at the United Nations headquarters in New York, the UN Security Council is about to hold a closed-doors meeting about the Israel-Gaza crisis.
Israel’s ambassador to the UN, Gilad Erdan, spoke to reporters beforehand. He said this unprecedented attack by Hamas was Israel’s 9/11. He held up photos and videos showing bodies strewn on the street and hostages being dragged into vehicles and taken to Gaza.
He said one photo showed a grandmother, who was a Holocaust survivor, in captivity and being forced to hold a rifle.
Erdan said the images would forever be seared in his brain and he demanded that the UN Security Council unequivocally condemn Hamas.
We are also expecting to soon hear from the Palestinian Ambassador to the UN, Riyad Mansour, and will bring you what he says.
US military deploys ships, aircraft to region
Bernd Debusmann Jr
Reporting from Washington DC
More from the United States, which has promised additional support for Israel, as we mentioned earlier.
The US military is deploying naval vessels and combat aircraft to "to bolster regional deterrence efforts" amid the ongoing fighting in Israel, a Pentagon statement says.
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin says a fleet of vessels centred on a US Navy aircraft carrier has been directed to the eastern Mediterranean. This deployment also includes several guided-missile cruisers and destroyers.
In addition, US Air Force squadrons in the Middle East are being augmented. "The US maintains forces globally to further reinforce this deterrence posture if required," Austin adds.
Extra resources, including munitions, are also being dispatched to Israel, with the first security assistance expected to arrive in the coming days. Austin says the action "underscores the United States’ ironclad support for the Israel Defense Forces and the Israeli people".
BreakingPalestinian death toll rises to 413
The health ministry in Gaza says in its latest update that 413 people have been killed, and 2,300 wounded, following retaliatory air strikes from Israel.
The latest official figure we have on the number of Israelis killed is about 600 - although there are reports it's even higher.
WATCH: Explosion in Gaza halts BBC journalist's live report
In the last hour we've been hearing from BBC reporter Rushdi Abu Alouf, whose live broadcast on the BBC News channel from Gaza was interrupted when a loud explosion was heard.
He spoke to presenter Maryam Moshiri live on air, telling her the explosion sounded "quite close."
Funeral processions in Gaza
Pictures have come into the newsroom showing a funeral procession in Rafah, a city in the southern part of the Gaza Strip.
They show a large gathering of mainly men carrying at least 13 bodies wrapped in body bags and white linen. Some are very small - the size of children.
Other pictures show women and a young girl wailing in grief.
Palestinian health ministry officials earlier said at least 313 people, including children, had been killed in Gaza and that another 1,990 had been injured in retaliatory Israeli strikes.
Hostage situation fraught with danger for Israel
Frank Gardner
Security correspondent
Israel is no stranger to hostage crises. As far back as the Entebbe raid in 1976 it showed the world it had the capability and the will to use its special forces to resolve them.
But the current situation in Gaza is on another level altogether. An estimated 100 Israeli citizens are being held by Hamas militants in Gaza after being captured and dragged across the border.
They’re believed to include military officers, civilians, women and children. Hamas are unlikely to concentrate them all in one place.
Instead, they will have been distributed across the heavily populated Gaza Strip, most likely in cellars below ground, their mobile phones and all digital devices taken off them so they’re unable to communicate or reveal their locations.
The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) have set up a situation room to deal with the issue but any rescue attempt is fraught with danger.
Gaza is so densely inhabited that even a stealthy approach by night is unlikely to go unseen by the intensely hostile population. A potential ground invasion by Israeli troops may release some but endanger others.
And negotiations, if they start, could easily stretch into years.
White House promises additional support for Israel
Bernd Debusmann Jr
Reporting from Washington DC
US President Joe Biden has "directed additional support" for Israel, according to a White House statement.
The statement says Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris were briefed by their national security team earlier on Sunday about the ongoing clashes in Israel.
"White House officials will remain in close contact with our Israeli partners," the statement adds. "The national security teams are engaged with Israelis and their counterparts throughout the region".
Earlier, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken made the rounds of talk shows to update US viewers on the fighting and on the US diplomatic response.
Speaking to the BBC's US partner CBS, Blinken said officials were also investigating reports that US citizens had been killed or taken captive by Hamas fighters.
"We can't confirm that in this moment," he said. "But we're very actively working to see if we can confirm the reports that we've had".
In Egypt, the US embassy in Cairo warned Americans to exercise "increased security awareness and precautions" following the shooting death of two Israeli citizens in the city of Alexandria.
The scene in southern Israel as night falls
Alice Cuddy
Reporting from southern Israel
A dead body lies on the road to Ashkelon.
We can hear rockets overhead, as military vehicles speed past and helicopters circle above us.
On our drive down, we saw two men being held by armed police, partially stripped and blindfolded.
Night is falling here, and people in these southern Israeli communities are still waiting and watching for the potential of an Israeli ground operation into Gaza.
Here's the latest
The attacks launched by the Hamas militant group on Saturday marked the biggest escalation in this conflict in decades. Israel launched air strikes in retaliation, and fighting is ongoing inside Israeli territory. Here's the latest:
IDF gives brief update
The Israeli Defense Forces has just given a short press conference with spokesman Daniel Hagari.
"We will do whatever it takes to protect our people and restore security," he says.
"We are looking to the north as well, with full readiness."
Hagari adds that the IDF believes Hamas militants are hiding amongst Gazan civilians in schools and hospitals.
The media briefing ended abruptly with Hagari saying those "who attack us will face a decisive attack back".
Netanyahu speaks with European leaders
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has spoken with Ukranian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Germany's Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Italy's Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and the UK's Prime Minister Rishi Sunak today.
Netanyahu said the leaders he spoke with expressed their full support for Israel to defend itself "as much as it takes".
Desperate attempts to find those missing from festival
As we've been reporting, many people are still missing after the attacks on Israel - including some who were at a music festival in the desert, not far from the Gaza border, when militants opened fire.
Family and friends of missing people have since been posting on the festival's social media pages, sharing names and asking: "Have you seen them?"
Among those missing from the festival is 23-year-old American-Israeli Hersh Golberg-Polin. He was there after celebrating his birthday this week, his parents told the Jerusalem Post.
Another man, Moshe Or, told Channel 12 he saw video on social media showing what appeared to be his brother and his brother's girlfriend being taken captive.
"In the video, you see Noa [Argamani] scared, terrified, screaming in panic on a motorcycle... My brother, who is a big guy... is being held by five people," he said.
You can read more here.
A lengthy journey to enter Israel
Alice Cuddy
Reporting from Israel
I've arrived in Israel after a long journey travelling from the UK.
I landed last night in Istanbul, Turkey, where my flight to Tel Aviv was then delayed by more than nine hours.
I watched as the number of delayed and cancelled flights into Ben Gurion International Airport grew and mulled how to get in.
Meeting with BBC correspondent Anna Foster and her producer Naomi Scherbel-Ball, we moved onto an overnight flight to the Jordanian capital Amman, hoping to make the journey by land.
After waiting for hours at the King Hussein border crossing this morning along with dozens of other people, we were all turned away and told there would be no entry today.
We then headed by car to another crossing in the north of the country, where we were eventually able to pass through.
Staff working at the border spoke of their shock and sadness at what has unfolded this weekend.
In pictures: Sunday in Israel and Gaza
What are Israel’s priorities now?
Frank Gardner
Security correspondent
In roughly descending order, these will be the Israeli government's immediate priorities:
BreakingBritish man serving in Israeli army killed
A British man serving with the Israeli army has been killed in an attack by Hamas militants, his family says.
Nathanel Young, 20, had been serving with the Israeli Defence Services when he was killed on the Gaza border.
In a statement, his brother Eliot Young said:
Two other British citizens - Jake Marlowe and Dan Darlington - are missing in Israel following Saturday's attacks by Palestinian militants.
You can read more here.
Everywhere you go, you see death - Gaza doctor
Dr Khamis Elessi, a neuro-rehabilitation and pain medicine consultant based in Gaza City, spoke to the BBC earlier.
"Everywhere you are going in Gaza you see funerals, you see death," he says. "It's like you are watching a movie about the end of life on this earth".
Elessi says he moved his family from their fourth-floor home to his brother's on the ground floor because, on the fourth floor, "the whole building is moving from right to left and from side to side".
He says he hasn't slept since yesterday. "You cannot just close your eyes, the kids are crying and screaming, there is no electricity, there's no internet and so you feel you could be next.
"This bomb could be on top your home, on [on] top of your apartment."
US citizen among missing, says father
The father of a 23-year-old US citizen has confirmed that his son is among those missing after an outdoor music festival came under attack on Saturday.
California-born Hersh Golberg-Polin, a dual US-Israeli citizen, texted his parents "I love you" and "I'm sorry" while the attack was taking place, his father Jonathan told the Jerusalem Post.
Goldberg-Polin had reportedly finished his military service in April and had been working as a waiter and medic since then. He had been living in Israel since he was seven years old.
“We just want him home and safe,” Jonathan Polin told the newspaper.
Families search for missing as Israeli hospitals treat hundreds
Yolande Knell
Middle East correspondent, reporting from Ashkelon, southern Israel
Israelis are still processing news of this unprecedented surprise Hamas attack and searching desperately for news of loved ones who are missing.
As the death toll rises, we are seeing shocking footage that shows bodies still lying by roads close to the Gaza Strip. One video shows a dead family’s belongings including a child’s pushchair.
At the main hospital in Ashkelon, we meet a distraught mother, Rachel Ezra, whose son, Oz and his girlfriend, Naomi - aged 24 and 23 - are still missing.
She berates a visiting MP, accusing the government of not doing enough to help. “I want my son,” she shouts, her voice raw. “I don’t know what to say!”
The hospital here has treated over 400 people injured in this huge assault: soldiers from military bases that were overrun, partygoers from a rave in the fields next to Gaza, and locals injured when their homes were hit by rockets.
There are reminders that the fighting still continues with booms overhead as the Iron Dome missile defence system intercepts incoming rocket fire.
Earlier near Ashkelon, motorists filmed the dramatic scenes as Israeli forces engaged in a shootout on a busy road.