Our live blog will shortly be closing until tomorrow morning.
Here are the day's key developments:
- The UN's High Commissioner for Human Rights has reported that since the first day of Eid al-Fitr, at least 100 Palestinians have been killed by Israel in Gaza, with 32 of them being children.
- Defence Minister Israel Katz said that Israel would not allow the Palestinian Authority (PA) to control the occupied West Bank during a tour of the territory with far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who said Israel was "here to stay".
- The journalists killed by Israel in Gaza far outnumber similar deaths in any armed conflict since the US Civil War, the Watson Institute's Cost of War project at Brown University has shown.
- The United Nations on Tuesday dismissed as "ridiculous" an assertion by Israel that there was enough food in the Gaza Strip to last for a long period of time, despite the closure of all 25 bakeries in the enclave supported by the World Food Programme.
- Hezbollah confirmed the death of two of its members, Hassan Bdeir along with his son, Ali Bdeir, following the Israeli air strike on Beirut's southern suburbs on Tuesday morning.
- The spokesperson for the Yemeni health ministry said three people were killed and two others wounded after US air strikes targeted the main water facility in al-Mansouriyah district in al-Hodeidah Governorate.
- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced late on Tuesday that Israel is removing all tariffs on US goods in a bid to "strengthen the alliance and ties" between the two countries, he said in a post on X.
- US President Donald Trump said he held a phone call with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi during which they "discussed... Gaza, and possible solutions", Trump said in a post on his social media platform, TruthSocial.
- Princeton University said the US government froze several dozen research grants to the school, which became the latest academic institution targeted by the Trump administration for pro-Palestine speech.