Israel has ordered the entire population of Gaza City to leave, as its forces prepare to capture the north of the Gaza Strip.
Israeli airstrikes have continued to destroy tower blocks, and the army says it now has operational control of 40% of the city, as ground forces prepare to fight what prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called the last important stronghold of Hamas.
Netanyahu this week said 100,000 people had left the city, but up to a million people are still living there – many in tents or shelters. Many of them say they will not – or cannot – leave.
After a strike hit a tower block near his home today, Ammar Sukkar called on Hamas negotiators to come and negotiate from a tent, not from air-conditioned rooms in Qatar – and insisted he would stay in the city.
Whether you like it or not, Netanyahu, we're not leaving, he told a trusted freelancer working for the BBC. Go and deal with Hamas, go and kill them. We're not to blame. And even if we're buried here, we're not leaving. This is my land.
Wael Shaban, also living near the tower that was targeted today, said they had been given 15 minutes to flee before the strike.
When we came back, the tents, the flour, everything has gone. Nothing is left. It's all to pressure us to go south, but we don't have the money to go. We can't even afford flour to eat. Transport to the south costs 1,500 shekels.
Israel's army is telling Gaza City residents that there is plenty of shelter, food and water in so-called humanitarian zones further south.
But aid organizations say the areas they are being sent to are already vastly overcrowded and lack food and medical resources. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has said nowhere in Gaza can currently absorb such a large movement of people, describing the mass evacuation plan as unfeasible and incomprehensible.
Israel's army is currently building a new aid distribution site near Rafah, 30km (18 miles) to the south.
The BBC traveled to the area, as part of a military embed, to see the new site. It's the first time the BBC has been allowed to enter Gaza at all since December 2023.

Military embeds are offered at Israel's discretion, are highly controlled, and offer no access to Palestinians or areas not under Israeli military control – but they are currently the only way for BBC journalists to enter Gaza at all.
Israel does not allow news organizations, including the BBC, into Gaza to report independently.
Rafah is a reminder of what happened the last time Israel's prime minister sent his forces into a city to crush the last stronghold of Hamas.
Driving down the newly paved military road along Gaza's border with Egypt, we pass the shattered remains of the old Rafah border crossing, the roof of one building cracked and pancaked on the ground.
Further along the road, known as the Philadelphi Corridor, discrete piles of masonry and splintered metal mapped where each house or farm building once stood.