Israel’s actions in Gaza have gone “beyond reasonable self-defence” and may have breached international law, a senior Labour MP has said.
Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting made the critical comments after stating that his party is “considering” its options on whether to back an SNP-led vote this week on an immediate ceasefire in the Middle East.
Labour has so far not ruled out backing the Commons motion, with fears it could reopen deep divides among MPs on the Israel-Hamas war.
A similar vote tabled by the SNP in November saw eight shadow ministers break ranks to back an immediate ceasefire, with some 56 Labour members defying a three-line whip and backing an amendment to the King’s Speech.
The SNP’s Westminster chief Stephen Flynn has said he has offered to meet Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer on Monday to discuss the vote, which is scheduled to take place on Wednesday.
The motion comes in the wake of a row over the Rochdale by-election, which saw Labour take the highly unusual step of withdrawing support for candidate Azhar Ali after he suggested Israel took Hamas’ October attack as a pretext to invade Gaza.
Mr Streeting told TalkTV on Monday that the Opposition party wants to see “what the final motion looks like”.
He added: “We are not going to be pushed around by protesters, and we are not going to be told what to say by our opponents in Parliament either.”
Sir Keir used a speech at Scottish Labour’s conference in Glasgow on Sunday to call for a “ceasefire that lasts” in the Middle East, in an echo of previous calls by UK ministers for a “sustainable ceasefire”.
Mr Streeting, a key figure in Sir Keir’s shadow cabinet, used broadcast interviews on Monday to hit out at Tel Aviv’s defence against Hamas, saying there had been a “disproportionate loss of civilian life” in the Palestinian enclave.
He said Israel had gone “too far” in its reaction to the October 7 raids by Hamas.
That attack by the Palestinian militant group killed about 1,200 people, with around 250 taken hostage.
Militants still hold around 130 hostages, and a quarter of them are believed to be dead.
The war has killed at least 28,985 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry.
Mr Streeting told Sky News: “We want to see a ceasefire, of course we do.
“And we have been increasingly concerned, as the wider international community has been, with the disproportionate loss of civilian life in Gaza.
“Israel has a responsibility to get its hostages back, every country in the world has a right to defend itself.
“But I think what we have seen are actions that go beyond reasonable self-defence and also call into question whether Israel has broken international law.
“The ICJ (International Court of Justice) is now investigating and we take all of that seriously.”
There are fresh fears about an escalation in the conflict if Israeli forces move into Rafah, a city and major aid delivery point in southern Gaza.
The Arab Group chair this month, Tunisia’s UN ambassador Tarek Ladeb, told UN reporters last Wednesday that some 1.5 million Palestinians who sought safety in Rafah face a “catastrophic scenario” if Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu goes ahead with a potential evacuation of civilians and military offensive in the area bordering Egypt.
Mr Streeting said any decision to move into the region would be an “intolerable escalation”.
“We are now at a really dangerous tipping point in relation to Rafah where the crossing is with Egypt, where there is a real risk of innocent Palestinians being pushed out of Gaza into the desert,” he told TalkTV.
Related: Netanyahu vows to invade Rafah if remaining Israeli hostages are not freed by Ramadan