UK accuses Israel of breaking international law in Gaza

Pro-Palestinian demonstrators hold placards as they gather in opposition to Israel reimposing its blockade of fuel and humanitarian aid to Gaza and U.S. President Donald Trump's plan to "take over" the territory, in London, Britain March 15, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 18 March 2025
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UK accuses Israel of breaking international law in Gaza

  • Accusation is first of its kind from Britain since war broke out
  • Foreign Secretary David Lammy: ‘Lack of aid unacceptable, hugely alarming’

LONDON: UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy on Monday night said Israel had committed “a breach of international law” after it prevented aid from reaching Gaza over the past fortnight.

“Israel quite rightly must defend its own security. But we find the lack of aid — it’s now been 15 days since aid got into Gaza — unacceptable, hugely alarming and very worrying,” he said.

“We would urge Israel to get back to the amount of trucks we were seeing — way beyond 600 — so Palestinians can get the necessary humanitarian support that they need at this time.”

It is the first time since the outbreak of hostilities between Israel and Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023, that the UK has explicitly accused Israel of breaking international law. 

Lammy previously said Israel had “no excuse” for withholding humanitarian aid from entering Gaza, and last year suspended 30 arms export licenses to the country over concerns that they could be used to breach international law.

He also said the UK would cooperate “100 percent” with the International Criminal Court in November after it issued an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.


Woman, boy drown off Greece after migrant boat sinks

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Woman, boy drown off Greece after migrant boat sinks

ATHENS: A boat carrying over 50 migrants sank off the Greek coast, killing a woman and a boy and leaving three others missing, the coast guard said Sunday.
“Fifty migrants have been rescued and are being cared for by the authorities,” after the accident off the island of Ikria in the northern Aegean Sea, a spokeswoman said.
“A rescue operation with a coast guard vessel is underway, and a team of rescuers and divers is expected later today,” she said.
Strong winds were hampering rescue efforts, according to public broadcaster ERT.
Ikaria lies close to Turkiye’s western coast, a frequent setoff point for migrants trying to enter the European Union.
Many migrants also take the much longer route from Libya to Crete in southern Greece.
The perilous crossings are often fatal. In early December, 17 people were found dead after their boat sank off Crete and 15 others were reported missing. Only two people survived.
According to the UN refugee agency 107 people died or went missing in 2025 off the Greek coast. The International Organization for Migration says about 33,000 migrants have died or gone missing in the Mediterranean since 2014.