That's it for our live coverage. Here's a summary of the day's major developments.
Violence on Israel-Gaza border
At least 52 Palestinians were killed and 2,200 others injured by Israeli forces during protests along the border fence on Monday, Palestinian health officials said
Palestinian officials accused Israeli forces of carrying out a "massacre"
The Israeli military said "rioters" threw firebombs and explosive devices at the fence and at Israeli soldiers deployed nearby, prompting them to respond with live fire
The military accused the Palestinian militant group Hamas of using the protests as cover to try to cross illegally into Israeli territory and launch attacks
Human rights groups condemned the Israeli military's use of live ammunition, saying troops should not have opened fire when there was no immediate threat to their lives
US embassy opening in Jerusalem
A high-level US delegation opened the new US embassy in Jerusalem
President Donald Trump addressed the ceremony in a recorded video message. He hailed the move as a “great day for Israel” and said the US would "always be a great friend to Israel and a partner in the cause of freedom and peace".
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu thanked Mr Trump for "having the courage to keep
your promises". "We are in Jerusalem and we are here to stay," he stated.
A spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said that by opening the embassy the US had cancelled its role in the peace process and insulted Palestinians.
Palestinians call for UN Security Council meeting
The Palestinian representative at the United Nations, Riyad Mansour, has called for an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council to stop the "savage onslaught" against civilians in Gaza.
"We condemn in the strongest terms this atrocity by the Israeli occupying forces, using this massive firepower against civilians who have the right to demonstrate peacefully and they have been demonstrating peacefully," he told reporters.
Mr Manous also warned that the US embassy move would deepen "the resentment and atmosphere of hatred between people instead of moving in the direction of peace".
BreakingDeath toll rises to 52 - health officials
Palestinian health ministry officials now say at least 52 people have been killed by Israeli forces at the protests on the Israel-Gaza border, and more than 2,200 others injured.
The death toll makes Monday the deadliest day since the start six weeks ago of a series of protests dubbed the "Great March of Return", along the Israel-Gaza border fence.
More than 100 Palestinian fatalities have been reported over those six weeks.
Trump 'still wants comprehensive peace agreement'
The White House has put out a briefing note after Donald Trump's video statement at the opening of the US embassy in Jerusalem, stressing that the president's recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital in December was a "necessary condition for peace between Israelis and Palestinians" and "does not mean the United States has taken a position on final status negotiations".
The note says the administration would continue to work to achieve a comprehensive peace agreement between the Israelis and the Palestinians.
The note also boasts that the new embassy was opened "in just six months" and "at a low cost to taxpayers", with initial modifications to the consulate costing $400,000 (£294,000).
Gaza killings 'shocking' - UN rights chief
The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Raad Al Hussein has joined condemnations of what he called "shocking" violence on the Israel-Gaza border, and said "those responsible for outrageous human rights violations" should be held to account.
US 'playing wrong card at wrong time' - Boris Johnson
UK Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said has said he is "extremely saddened by the loss of life" in Gaza.
"We understand that there are some people provoking that violence. But on the other hand there has got to be a restraint in the use of live fire," he said.
Johnson said the UK did not agree with the US decision to move its embassy to Jerusalem, and that it continued to think the US was "playing the wrong card at the wrong time".
France calls for Israeli restraint
France’s Foreign Minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, has called on the Israeli authorities to "act with caution and
restraint in the use of force, which must be strictly proportional".
"It is urgent to reinstate the conditions necessary for the pursuit of a
peaceful solution in a regional context already marked by high tensions," he added.
"France is calling on all actors to act responsibly to prevent a new
flare-up."
He also reiterated France's opposition to the US embassy move, saying it "violated international law and, in particular, UN Security Council resolutions".
Mr Le Drian met his UK counterpart, Boris Johnson, in London on Monday.
AFPCopyright: AFP
BreakingDeath toll rises to 43 - health officials
Monday's death toll in Gaza has risen to 43, Palestinian health officials say, with more than 2,238 people reported injured.
It is the deadliest day since the start six weeks ago of a series of protests dubbed the "Great March of Return" along the Israel-Gaza border fence.
There have been at least 90 fatalities in this latest spell of demonstrations, according to the Palestinian health ministry.
PLO calls for general strike to mourn dead
The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) has reportedly called for a general strike "to mourn the martyrdom" of protesters on the Israel-Gaza border.
The official Palestinian news agency, Wafa, cited PLO Executive Committee member Wasel Abu Yousef as announcing a "complete strike" across the Palestinian territories.
US has 'insulted the world', says Abbas spokesman
A spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has warned that the opening of the US embassy in Jerusalem will further destabilise the Middle East.
"With this step, the US administration has cancelled its role in the peace process and has insulted the world, the Palestinian people and the Arab and the Islamic nation and it has created incitement and instability," Nabil Abu Rdeineh told Reuters news agency.
Top US diplomat praises embassy move
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is yet to say anything about the violent clashes at the Gaza border.
He has released a statement praising President Trump's decision to relocate the US embassy, saying he looked forward to returning to Jerusalem soon.
President Trump tweeted twice on Monday to celebrate the embassy's opening, but also chose not to address the deadly violence in Gaza.
His son-in-law and aide Jared Kushner briefly noted the protests in his speech at the embassy opening event, saying the protesters were "part of the problem and not the solution".
Here's Mike Pompeo's statement in full:
USSDCopyright: USSD
Protesters 'hurling firebombs and explosive devices' - IDF
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has said 40,000 Palestinians are taking part in "violent riots" in 13 locations along the Israel-Gaza border, and that it is determined to fulfil its mission to protect Israeli territory and civilians.
"The
rioters are hurling firebombs and explosive devices at the security fence and
at IDF troops and are burning tires, throwing rocks and launching flaming
objects with the intention of igniting fires in Israeli territory and harming
IDF troops," a statement said.
"IDF troops are responding with riot dispersal means and fire, and
are operating according to standard operating procedures."
Rights groups - including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch (HRW) and others - have condemned the IDF's actions.
“The policy of Israeli
authorities to fire irrespective of whether there is an immediate threat to
life on Palestinian demonstrators in Gaza, caged in for a decade and under
occupation for a half century, has resulted in a bloodbath that anyone could
have foreseen,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, the HRW's Middle East director.
Israel says jet struck Hamas facility
AFPCopyright: AFP
An Israeli fighter jet has struck a military training facility belonging to the Palestinian militant group Hamas in the northern Gaza Strip, according to a statement from the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).
"The strike was conducted in response to the
violent acts of the last few hours being carried out by Hamas along the
security fence," the statement says.
Earlier, an aircraft and a tank targeted two Hamas military positions in response to an incident in which Israeli forces were fired upon, the statement adds.
"The IDF operates with determination in order to prevent massive terror activities constantly being led by the Hamas terror organisation in. Each act of terror will be met with a harsh response."
Hamas and other groups organising the protests on the Israel-Gaza border say they are peacefully calling for the right of Palestinian refugees to return to land they fled from or were forced to leave in 1948, when Israel was created.
The Israeli government has long ruled out any right of return and says terrorists are using the cover of the protests to try to cross illegally into its territory.
Egypt joins condemnations of force
Egypt's foreign ministry has released a statement condemning the Israeli military's use of force at the border.
Quote Message: Egypt rejects the use of force against peaceful marches demanding legitimate and just rights, and warns of the negative consequences of this dangerous escalation in the occupied Palestinian territories."
Egypt rejects the use of force against peaceful marches demanding legitimate and just rights, and warns of the negative consequences of this dangerous escalation in the occupied Palestinian territories."
US 'breaking international law'
As triumphant speeches continue at the new US embassy, the Palestinian foreign ministry has accused the US administration of “acting on
its arrogance of power and disdain for Palestinian rights” and stressed that
the fate of Jerusalem “will only be determined in line with international law”.
"As the Palestinian people commemorate seventy years
since the onset of their Nakba (catastrophe) of dispossession, denial, and
injustice, the US administration added insult to injury in Jerusalem by defying
international law and rejecting UN Security Council resolutions relevant to
Palestinian rights, especially in Jerusalem," a statement carried by the official Wafa news agency says.
The ministry adds: "The Palestinian leadership will
continue to pursue all available legal and diplomatic avenues to defend our
people's rights from Israel's entrenched regime of colonisation and aggression
as well as states that defend and sponsor this regime of oppression. This is
also an international responsibility."
Israel regards Jerusalem as its "eternal and
undivided" capital, while the Palestinians claim East Jerusalem - occupied
by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war - as the capital of a future state.
Benjamin Netanyahu: 'This is history'
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke after Kushner.
He personally thanked Kushner and Ivanka Trump, and President Trump.
"What a glorious day. Remember this moment. This is history. President Trump, by recognising history, you have made history."
He praised Israeli soldiers who were "protecting the borders of Israel, as we speak, today".
He saluted the intelligence and security services too, to applause from the crowd.
AFPCopyright: AFP
Quote Message: Today, the embassy of the most powerful nation on earth. Our greatest ally, the United States of America. Today, its embassy opened here!" from Benjamin Netanyahu Israeli PM
Today, the embassy of the most powerful nation on earth. Our greatest ally, the United States of America. Today, its embassy opened here!"
Kushner: 'Once again the US can be trusted'
ReutersCopyright: Reuters
Jared Kushner minutes ago finished speaking at the opening ceremony. He called Jerusalem "the eternal heart of the Jewish people".
"By moving our embassy to Jerusalem we have showed the world once again that the United States can be trusted."
That remark caused some consternation from commentators, who pointed out that President Trump has just spectacularly reneged on the nuclear deal signed with Iran under the Obama administration.
In the first reference from a Trump official during the ceremony to the violence taking place at the border, Kushner said: "Those provoking violence are part of the problem and not part of the solution."
He said the controversial decision to move the embassy "did not reflect a departure from our strong commitment to lasting peace".
"The United States is prepared to support a peace agreement in every way that we can. We believe that it is possible for both sides to gain more than they give so that all people can live in peace safe from danger, free from fear and able to pursue their dreams," he said.
Dramatic images from the border
AFPCopyright: AFP
ReutersCopyright: Reuters
ReutersCopyright: Reuters
AFPCopyright: AFP
Lebanese PM: Embassy move is 'provocative'
Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri said in a series of tweets on Monday that the US embassy relocation was a "provocative" move that would "further exacerbate" tension in the region.
"We affirm our complete
solidarity with the Palestinian brothers in their legitimate
struggle," he said.
Israeli group B’Tselem said the Israeli authorities had shown an "appalling indifference towards human life" and called for an "immediate halt to the killing of Palestinian demonstrators".
Quote Message: The demonstrations held in Gaza today came as no surprise. Israel had plenty of time to come up with alternate approaches for dealing with the protests, apart from firing live ammunition. The fact that live gunfire is once again the sole measure that the Israeli military is using in the field evinces appalling indifference towards human life on the part of senior Israeli government and military officials. B’Tselem calls for an immediate halt to the killing of Palestinian demonstrators. If the relevant officials do not issue an order to stop the lethal fire, the soldiers in the field must refuse to comply with these manifestly unlawful open-fire orders. from B’Tselem
The demonstrations held in Gaza today came as no surprise. Israel had plenty of time to come up with alternate approaches for dealing with the protests, apart from firing live ammunition. The fact that live gunfire is once again the sole measure that the Israeli military is using in the field evinces appalling indifference towards human life on the part of senior Israeli government and military officials. B’Tselem calls for an immediate halt to the killing of Palestinian demonstrators. If the relevant officials do not issue an order to stop the lethal fire, the soldiers in the field must refuse to comply with these manifestly unlawful open-fire orders.
Live Reporting
David Gritten and Joel Gunter
All times stated are UK
-
At least 52 Palestinians were killed and 2,200 others injured by Israeli forces during protests along the border fence on Monday, Palestinian health officials said
-
Palestinian officials accused Israeli forces of carrying out a "massacre"
-
The Israeli military said "rioters" threw firebombs and explosive devices at the fence and at Israeli soldiers deployed nearby, prompting them to respond with live fire
-
The military accused the Palestinian militant group Hamas of using the protests as cover to try to cross illegally into Israeli territory and launch attacks
-
Human rights groups condemned the Israeli military's use of live ammunition, saying troops should not have opened fire when there was no immediate threat to their lives
-
A high-level US delegation opened the new US embassy in Jerusalem
-
President Donald Trump addressed the ceremony in a recorded video message. He hailed the move as a “great day for Israel” and said the US would "always be a great friend to Israel and a partner in the cause of freedom and peace".
-
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu thanked Mr Trump for "having the courage to keep
your promises". "We are in Jerusalem and we are here to stay," he stated.
-
A spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said that by opening the embassy the US had cancelled its role in the peace process and insulted Palestinians.
View more on twitterView more on twitter AFPCopyright: AFP USSDCopyright: USSD AFPCopyright: AFP AFPCopyright: AFP ReutersCopyright: Reuters AFPCopyright: AFP ReutersCopyright: Reuters ReutersCopyright: Reuters AFPCopyright: AFP View more on twitterView more on twitter View more on twitterView more on twitter
Latest PostEvening summary
That's it for our live coverage. Here's a summary of the day's major developments.
Violence on Israel-Gaza border
US embassy opening in Jerusalem
Palestinians call for UN Security Council meeting
The Palestinian representative at the United Nations, Riyad Mansour, has called for an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council to stop the "savage onslaught" against civilians in Gaza.
"We condemn in the strongest terms this atrocity by the Israeli occupying forces, using this massive firepower against civilians who have the right to demonstrate peacefully and they have been demonstrating peacefully," he told reporters.
Mr Manous also warned that the US embassy move would deepen "the resentment and atmosphere of hatred between people instead of moving in the direction of peace".
BreakingDeath toll rises to 52 - health officials
Palestinian health ministry officials now say at least 52 people have been killed by Israeli forces at the protests on the Israel-Gaza border, and more than 2,200 others injured.
The death toll makes Monday the deadliest day since the start six weeks ago of a series of protests dubbed the "Great March of Return", along the Israel-Gaza border fence.
More than 100 Palestinian fatalities have been reported over those six weeks.
Trump 'still wants comprehensive peace agreement'
The White House has put out a briefing note after Donald Trump's video statement at the opening of the US embassy in Jerusalem, stressing that the president's recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital in December was a "necessary condition for peace between Israelis and Palestinians" and "does not mean the United States has taken a position on final status negotiations".
The note says the administration would continue to work to achieve a comprehensive peace agreement between the Israelis and the Palestinians.
The note also boasts that the new embassy was opened "in just six months" and "at a low cost to taxpayers", with initial modifications to the consulate costing $400,000 (£294,000).
Gaza killings 'shocking' - UN rights chief
The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Raad Al Hussein has joined condemnations of what he called "shocking" violence on the Israel-Gaza border, and said "those responsible for outrageous human rights violations" should be held to account.
US 'playing wrong card at wrong time' - Boris Johnson
UK Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said has said he is "extremely saddened by the loss of life" in Gaza.
"We understand that there are some people provoking that violence. But on the other hand there has got to be a restraint in the use of live fire," he said.
Johnson said the UK did not agree with the US decision to move its embassy to Jerusalem, and that it continued to think the US was "playing the wrong card at the wrong time".
France calls for Israeli restraint
France’s Foreign Minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, has called on the Israeli authorities to "act with caution and restraint in the use of force, which must be strictly proportional".
"It is urgent to reinstate the conditions necessary for the pursuit of a peaceful solution in a regional context already marked by high tensions," he added. "France is calling on all actors to act responsibly to prevent a new flare-up."
He also reiterated France's opposition to the US embassy move, saying it "violated international law and, in particular, UN Security Council resolutions".
Mr Le Drian met his UK counterpart, Boris Johnson, in London on Monday.
BreakingDeath toll rises to 43 - health officials
Monday's death toll in Gaza has risen to 43, Palestinian health officials say, with more than 2,238 people reported injured.
It is the deadliest day since the start six weeks ago of a series of protests dubbed the "Great March of Return" along the Israel-Gaza border fence.
There have been at least 90 fatalities in this latest spell of demonstrations, according to the Palestinian health ministry.
PLO calls for general strike to mourn dead
The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) has reportedly called for a general strike "to mourn the martyrdom" of protesters on the Israel-Gaza border.
The official Palestinian news agency, Wafa, cited PLO Executive Committee member Wasel Abu Yousef as announcing a "complete strike" across the Palestinian territories.
US has 'insulted the world', says Abbas spokesman
A spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has warned that the opening of the US embassy in Jerusalem will further destabilise the Middle East.
"With this step, the US administration has cancelled its role in the peace process and has insulted the world, the Palestinian people and the Arab and the Islamic nation and it has created incitement and instability," Nabil Abu Rdeineh told Reuters news agency.
Top US diplomat praises embassy move
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is yet to say anything about the violent clashes at the Gaza border.
He has released a statement praising President Trump's decision to relocate the US embassy, saying he looked forward to returning to Jerusalem soon.
President Trump tweeted twice on Monday to celebrate the embassy's opening, but also chose not to address the deadly violence in Gaza.
His son-in-law and aide Jared Kushner briefly noted the protests in his speech at the embassy opening event, saying the protesters were "part of the problem and not the solution".
Here's Mike Pompeo's statement in full:
Protesters 'hurling firebombs and explosive devices' - IDF
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has said 40,000 Palestinians are taking part in "violent riots" in 13 locations along the Israel-Gaza border, and that it is determined to fulfil its mission to protect Israeli territory and civilians.
"The rioters are hurling firebombs and explosive devices at the security fence and at IDF troops and are burning tires, throwing rocks and launching flaming objects with the intention of igniting fires in Israeli territory and harming IDF troops," a statement said.
"IDF troops are responding with riot dispersal means and fire, and are operating according to standard operating procedures."
Rights groups - including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch (HRW) and others - have condemned the IDF's actions.
“The policy of Israeli authorities to fire irrespective of whether there is an immediate threat to life on Palestinian demonstrators in Gaza, caged in for a decade and under occupation for a half century, has resulted in a bloodbath that anyone could have foreseen,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, the HRW's Middle East director.
Israel says jet struck Hamas facility
An Israeli fighter jet has struck a military training facility belonging to the Palestinian militant group Hamas in the northern Gaza Strip, according to a statement from the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).
"The strike was conducted in response to the violent acts of the last few hours being carried out by Hamas along the security fence," the statement says.
Earlier, an aircraft and a tank targeted two Hamas military positions in response to an incident in which Israeli forces were fired upon, the statement adds.
"The IDF operates with determination in order to prevent massive terror activities constantly being led by the Hamas terror organisation in. Each act of terror will be met with a harsh response."
Hamas and other groups organising the protests on the Israel-Gaza border say they are peacefully calling for the right of Palestinian refugees to return to land they fled from or were forced to leave in 1948, when Israel was created.
The Israeli government has long ruled out any right of return and says terrorists are using the cover of the protests to try to cross illegally into its territory.
Egypt joins condemnations of force
Egypt's foreign ministry has released a statement condemning the Israeli military's use of force at the border.
US 'breaking international law'
As triumphant speeches continue at the new US embassy, the Palestinian foreign ministry has accused the US administration of “acting on its arrogance of power and disdain for Palestinian rights” and stressed that the fate of Jerusalem “will only be determined in line with international law”.
"As the Palestinian people commemorate seventy years since the onset of their Nakba (catastrophe) of dispossession, denial, and injustice, the US administration added insult to injury in Jerusalem by defying international law and rejecting UN Security Council resolutions relevant to Palestinian rights, especially in Jerusalem," a statement carried by the official Wafa news agency says.
The ministry adds: "The Palestinian leadership will continue to pursue all available legal and diplomatic avenues to defend our people's rights from Israel's entrenched regime of colonisation and aggression as well as states that defend and sponsor this regime of oppression. This is also an international responsibility."
Israel regards Jerusalem as its "eternal and undivided" capital, while the Palestinians claim East Jerusalem - occupied by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war - as the capital of a future state.
Benjamin Netanyahu: 'This is history'
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke after Kushner.
He personally thanked Kushner and Ivanka Trump, and President Trump.
"What a glorious day. Remember this moment. This is history. President Trump, by recognising history, you have made history."
He praised Israeli soldiers who were "protecting the borders of Israel, as we speak, today".
He saluted the intelligence and security services too, to applause from the crowd.
Kushner: 'Once again the US can be trusted'
Jared Kushner minutes ago finished speaking at the opening ceremony. He called Jerusalem "the eternal heart of the Jewish people".
"By moving our embassy to Jerusalem we have showed the world once again that the United States can be trusted."
That remark caused some consternation from commentators, who pointed out that President Trump has just spectacularly reneged on the nuclear deal signed with Iran under the Obama administration.
In the first reference from a Trump official during the ceremony to the violence taking place at the border, Kushner said: "Those provoking violence are part of the problem and not part of the solution."
He said the controversial decision to move the embassy "did not reflect a departure from our strong commitment to lasting peace".
"The United States is prepared to support a peace agreement in every way that we can. We believe that it is possible for both sides to gain more than they give so that all people can live in peace safe from danger, free from fear and able to pursue their dreams," he said.
Dramatic images from the border
Lebanese PM: Embassy move is 'provocative'
Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri said in a series of tweets on Monday that the US embassy relocation was a "provocative" move that would "further exacerbate" tension in the region.
"We affirm our complete solidarity with the Palestinian brothers in their legitimate struggle," he said.
Human rights groups condemn Israel's use of force
Human rights groups have condemned the Israeli military's use of force against protesters at the Gaza border.
Amnesty International called it an "abhorrent violation of international law".
Israeli group B’Tselem said the Israeli authorities had shown an "appalling indifference towards human life" and called for an "immediate halt to the killing of Palestinian demonstrators".