
PM Sunak meets King of Jordan as Gaza offensive looms

Rishi Sunak met with King Abdullah of Jordan amid growing concern about the fate of Palestinians in Gaza as an Israeli invasion looms.
The King, Colonel-in-Chief of a British Army regiment Light Dragoons since 2003, has embarked on a European tour to "rally international support to stop the war on Gaza", his office said, with stops also expected in Italy, Germany and France.
It comes after the monarch met US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Friday.
Number 10 said that the two men discussed diplomatic efforts to prevent "further escalation in the wider Middle East".
"The leaders also agreed on the importance of taking measures to protect civilians in Gaza, including British and Jordanian citizens caught up in the violence, as well as ensuring humanitarian aid reaches those in need," a Downing Street spokesperson said.
The expected assault by Israel comes more than a week after Hamas militants launched a deadly assault on the country.
Mr Sunak will address MPs today about the escalating crisis in Israel and Gaza, as politicians return to Westminster amid renewed conflict in the Middle East.

Two flights at the weekend left Israel as part of a UK Government effort to get British nationals out of the country.
The evacuations come as the Israel-Hamas conflict has been escalating in the region.
According to FlightRadar24, a Royal Air Force A400M made two flights from Tel Aviv to Cyprus, the first on Friday night and the second during the early hours of Saturday morning.
Foreign Secretary James Cleverly stressed British backing for Israel while also urging Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the country's military to show restraint and discipline.
The senior Cabinet minister said the UK will always raise breaches of international law, but declined to say whether Israel has crossed that line already.

"Friends speak honestly with friends and we have a very, very good working relationship with the Israeli government, and whenever I have spoken to them I have reinforced the UK's position about the preservation of life, the avoidance of civilian casualties," Mr Cleverly told Sky News.
He added: "I've said that restraint, discipline, these are the hallmarks of the Israel Defence Force that I want to see."
The United Nations, senior EU figures and aid agencies have all expressed alarm as many Palestinians struggle to flee ahead of a "co-ordinated" offensive in the Gaza Strip involving air, ground and naval forces.
Hundreds of people gathered at a vigil in central London on Sunday to commemorate Israeli victims of the Hamas incursion into the country.
Many were draped in Israeli flags, and posters saying "bring them home" with names and faces of hostages captured by Hamas were being handed out.
It comes a day after tens of thousands of people took to the streets across the UK in a show of solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza.