The death toll from the incessant Israeli Strikes on Gaza Strip reached at least 33,037 on Thursday.
The Gaza health ministry said at least 62 people were killed by the Israeli forces in the Palestinian territory in 24 hours. Moreover 75,668 people have been wounded so far in Gaza since the war began on 7 October last year.
Meanwhile, Polish President Andrzej Duda on Thursday denounced "outrageous" remarks made by the Israeli ambassador to Warsaw over the death of a Polish aid worker in an Israeli strike in Gaza.
The airstrike on Monday killed seven staff of the US-based food charity World Central Kitchen (WCK), including 35-year-old Polish citizen, Damian Sobol.
Israeli ambassador Yacov Livne gave an interview late Wednesday in which he stopped short of apologising for the incident despite being repeatedly asked to do so.
Duda on Thursday called his remarks "not very fortunate, in short, outrageous," adding that "the ambassador is the biggest problem for the state of Israel in its relations with Poland".
On the other hand, a letter signed by more than 600 lawyers on Thursday placed more pressure on the UK government to suspend arms export licences to Israel after three Britons were killed in an Israeli strike.
The three died in Gaza on Monday along with four others who had all been working for US-based food charity World Central Kitchen (WCK).
Britain's strategic licensing criteria states that weapons should not be exported when there is a "clear risk" they could be used in international humanitarian law violations.