Evening Recap
Our live coverage from Gaza will shortly be closing until tomorrow morning.
Here are some of the day's key developments:
The Palestinian Health Ministry said the number of known dead in Gaza is now 42,010 as of 9 October. At least another 10,000 people are believed to be missing, and almost 98,000 have been wounded.
US President Joe Biden held his first phone call since August with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in which he called for humanitarian access to north Gaza via a Jordanian corridor.
Al-Aqsa TV journalist Mohammed al-Tanani was killed in an attack by Israeli forces on several news crews in north Gaza, while social media posts showed journalist Tamer Labed, who was with al-Tanani, had been wounded.
Another Al Jazeera journalist has been shot in the neck by an Israeli sniper while on duty near Jabalya refugee camp. Colleagues say Fadi Al-Wahidi is in critical condition.
The UK NGO Medical Aid for Palestinians said Israel's renewed siege on north Gaza's three main hospitals as 400,000 people are again forcibly displaced could mean the "erasure" of Palestinian life
Plainclothes Israeli forces gunned down four Palestinian men in a vehicle in the West Bank city of Nablus, leaving another wounded, according to the Palestinian Wafa news agency.