THE UK will provide an additional £20 million of humanitarian aid to civilians in Gaza, Rishi Sunak has announced.

The Prime Minister, who reiterated the UK’s backing for the Israeli government, said that the new aid funding was “more than doubling our previous support to the Palestinian people”.

It comes as the first aid convoys reached Gaza through the border with Egypt over the weekend – 20 trucks on Saturday and 14 on Sunday.

But the United Nations said much more was needed and the Rafah border crossing is still not open for foreign nationals seeking to flee bombarded and besieged Gaza.

Sunak also said the UK Government has judged that a deadly blast at a Gaza hospital last week was “likely caused by a missile, or part of one, that was launched from within Gaza towards Israel”.

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Hundreds of people are believed to have been killed in the atrocity last week at Al-Ahli, which provoked condemnation around the world as well as rival claims about who was to blame.

Israel and Hamas both issued competing versions of events regarding the cause of the blast, with the Palestinian militant group blaming an Israeli airstrike.

The Israeli military blamed a misfiring rocket from the Palestinian Islamic Jihad group and released imagery and communications intercepts it said supported its case.

Sunak’s statement to MPs comes after he committed the Government to publishing an assessment of who was behind the blast.

It comes after he visited Israel, Saudi Arabia and Egypt last week.

Global diplomatic efforts continue to prevent the Israel-Hamas war triggering wider bloodshed across the Middle East.

The Prime Minister and Joe Biden, along with the leaders of France, Germany, Italy and Canada, called for Israel to respect international humanitarian law, demanded the release of the hostages held by Hamas and pushed for aid for Gaza in a joint call on Sunday night.