Israel is engaging in collective punishment and does not have the right to breach international law in its response in Gaza, Taoiseach Leo Varadkar has said.
He also called for the opening of a humanitarian corridor to allow aid to reach Palestinians.
The war, which was ignited by a wide-ranging Hamas attack into Israel, has already claimed at least 2,600 lives on both sides.
Israel has cut off food, water and electricity to Gaza in response to the attack on Saturday and has carried out airstrikes in the region.
An Israeli military spokesperson said on Thursday that they are preparing for a ground offensive in Gaza, but that one has not yet been ordered.
International humanitarian law says the collective punishment of a group of persons for a crime committed by an individual is forbidden.
Mr Varadkar told RTร: โIsrael has the right to defend itself, but Israel doesnโt have the right to do wrong.
โIsrael is a country that is surrounded by enemies, brutal savage groups like Hamas and Hezbollah, countries like Iran, often supported by Islamic fundamentalists and antisemites around the world.
โSo Israel is under threat. They do have a right to defend themselves, but they donโt have the right to breach international humanitarian law.
โAnd Iโm really concerned about what Iโm seeing happening in Gaza at the moment.
โTo me, it amounts to collective punishment. Cutting off power, cutting off fuel supplies and water supplies, thatโs not the way a respectable democratic state should conduct itself.โ
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Israelโs strike on Gaza has levelled entire neighbourhoods, killing more than 1,400 people, more than 60 per cent of them women and children, according to the Gaza health ministry.
More than 340,000 have been displaced, or 15 per cent of Gazaโs population.
The Taoiseach said that Israel is breaching humanitarian law through its punishment of Palestinian civilians and that Ireland will endeavour to see the opening of a humanitarian corridor to allow aid to reach Gaza.
โI believe by targeting civilians and by cutting off civilian infrastructure that is a breach of international humanitarian law and I think itโs very important for us as Ireland to make sure that that voice is brought to the table at European Union level,โ he said.
โSo yes, Hamas should release all of the hostages immediately. Israeli citizens and dual citizens alike.
โIsrael is entirely justified in going after Hamas in Gaza and elsewhere, but operations that clearly affect civilians disproportionately are wrong, cutting off electricity, cutting off water. Thatโs not acceptable.
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โAnd one thing we definitely need to see happen now, and we will do anything we can through the UN to achieve this, is the opening of the humanitarian corridor between Egypt and Gaza.โ
Speaking in Belfast on Thursday Sinn Fein President Mary Lou McDonald said Irelandโs political history and experience of peacebuilding can have an influence in the international discussion on the current crisis in the region.
โIn terms of the Middle East and Ireland and our historical experience of colonisation, partition, war and conflict, and then peacebuilding, I think we need to really leverage all of that experience in good faith to the very, very best of our ability and I think that we can have an influence,โ she said.
โI donโt want to overstate it, but equally I wouldnโt understate the value of an Irish voice.
โAnd weโre encouraging everybody right across political life north and south, and for particularly those in government in Dublin to really grasp that opportunity.โ
She added: โWe need immediate ceasefires. We need dialogue. We need a process of peacebuilding. We need the application of international law across the board.โ
By Claudia Savage, PA