LONDON — Landmark buildings around Europe, including in London and the in Berlin, have lit up with the Israeli flag — and some cities have seen pro-Palestinian protests — as governments across the continent convened emergency meetings to respond to the in Israel and Gaza.
Concern is also growing after reports that citizens from the United Kingdom, France and possibly other European countries were among the dead or missing.
Here are some of the ways some European countries have responded since the early Saturday.
Steadfast support
In the United Kingdom, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has said his government is to provide diplomatic, intelligence or security support, if requested, to Israel. The U.K. is one of ," he said. The government has not ruled out evacuating its citizens from affected areas, saying keeping Britons safe is its "" Sunak held a with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday.
The deputy prime minister, Oliver Dowden, said Monday evening that his government was to the Palestinian territories.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Germany "."
French President Emmanuel Macron condemned the attacks and said he had held talks with Prime Minister Netanyahu as well as with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Lebanon's caretaker prime minister, Najib Mikati.
The European Union's executive arm announced it was suspending all aid to the Palestinian territories.
"As the biggest donor of the Palestinians, the European Commission is putting its full development aid, worth a total of EUR 691m [$728 million] under review," Oliver Varhelyi, EU commissioner for neighbor and enlargement, , formerly known as Twitter.
"The scale of terror and brutality against #Israel and its people is a turning point. There can be no business as usual," he said.
The EU will hold an of its foreign ministers Tuesday in Muscat, Oman, to discuss the situation.
European citizens dead and missing
The more than 10 British citizens are feared dead or missing in Israel, citing an unnamed official U.K. source. Among those killed in Israel was 20-year-old British man, who was serving in the Israeli Defense Forces, according to several British .
The U.K. Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office did not immediately respond to NPR's request for comment.
The French government were killed in Israel.
On Monday, French lawmaker Meyer Habib tweeted that were missing, dead or taken hostage after Hamas' attack on Israel began Saturday. He said he spoke to a man who confirmed that his son, a 26-year-old French man who was living in Israel, was taken hostage by Hamas.
Germany's Foreign Ministry said it assumes , according to Le Monde.
In France and Germany, security has been ramped up at and . London's has also stepped up patrols after videos emerged of celebrations in the city of the attacks against Israel.
Public support for Palestinian rights and sympathy for the Palestinian cause, according to, has been stronger in some European countries than it is in the United States. One poll published in July by the company found that, of people in European countries with opinions about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, there was a greater tendency to side with the Palestinians. The exception was Germany, where respondents were almost evenly split on the issue.
This week, there have been pro-Palestinian protests in , and cities.
Scottish leader's relatives in Gaza
Scotland's leader, First Minister Humza Yousaf, is one of those who has found his family affected by the conflict. He told journalists in Scotland on Monday that his . The parents of Yousaf's wife, Nadia El-Nakla, who is of Palestinian heritage, had been visiting relatives in Gaza when they found themselves trapped as Israel began its attacks on the territory this weekend. The Scottish his parents-in-law had been told by Israeli authorities to leave because "Gaza will effectively be obliterated" but that nobody could guarantee them safe passage out.
"I'm in a situation where, frankly, night by night, day by day, we don't know whether or not my mother-in-law and father-in-law — who have nothing to do, as most Gazans don't, with Hamas or with any terror attack — whether they will make it through the night or not," Yousaf said.
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