THE UK Government has been warned “begging” Israel to let food into Gaza to prevent people being starved will not work.

Foreign Office Minister Andrew Mitchell told MPs on Tuesday that Israel “must do more” to provide land routes for aid.

But the minister, who acts as a deputy for Foreign Secretary Lord Cameron in the Commons, was warned by shadow foreign secretary David Lammy that current levels of aid going into Gaza are “woefully inadequate”, saying the famine was “man-made”.

Conservative former minister Kit Malthouse suggested Israel may be “wilfully obstructing” aid from crossing the border.

The National: Kit Malthouse

He said the UK was “begging, pleading, pressing the Israeli government to allow more aid in, to seemingly little effect”.

Malthouse (above) added: “Now, has [Mitchell] reached the conclusion that the Israeli government is wilfully obstructing the entrance of aid into the Gaza Strip and, if so, that will presumably be a breach of the International Court of Justice’s ruling and indeed international humanitarian law. So what will the consequence be of that conclusion?”

READ MORE: Prestwick Airport 'cuts off Israeli Air Force access' after backlash

Mitchell replied: “I don’t think we are in a position to reach that judgment.”

Answering an urgent question on the situation in Gaza, Mitchell told the Commons: “We are deeply concerned about the growing risk of famine, exacerbated by the spread of disease and of course the terrible psychosocial impacts of the conflict that will be felt for years to come.

“We are totally committed to getting humanitarian aid to all the people in Gaza who desperately need it – either ourselves, or through UN agencies and British or other charities. We and our partners are pushing to get aid in through all feasible means by land, sea and air.”

However, the minister said sea and air deliveries could not “substitute delivery of aid through land routes”.

“There is no doubt that land crossings are the most effective means of getting aid into Gaza, and Israel must do more,” he added.

The National: David Lammy

Labour frontbencher Lammy (above) warned that famine in Gaza is “imminent”, with half the population “expected to face catastrophic levels of hunger, the highest number of people ever recorded under this system”.

He added: “But what distinguishes the horror in Gaza from what has come before is this is not driven by drought or natural disaster – it is man-made.

“It is the consequences of war, it is the consequence of aid that is available not reaching those who need it. Food is piled up in trucks just a few kilometres away, while children in Gaza are starving. It’s unbearable, and it must not go on.”

Lammy added that a planned Israeli offensive in the southern Gaza city of Rafah would risk “catastrophic humanitarian consequences” and called on the Government to work to prevent a further attack.

SNP foreign affairs spokesman Brendan O’Hara issued a similar plea, telling MPs: “The people of Gaza are not starving. The people of Gaza are being starved.”

He claimed that people “just 44 miles from Tel Aviv” are at risk of starvation, is slightly less than the distance between Glasgow and Edinburgh.

Labour backbencher Zarah Sultana said babies in Gaza are so malnourished they do not have the energy to cry.

READ MORE: Israel confirms plans to expand military operation into Rafah

She added: “This isn’t a natural disaster, it isn’t accidental, it is intentional – Israel is using starvation as a weapon of war to collectively punish the Palestinian people. Israel blocks food from entering Gaza while bombing the people trapped inside.”

The National: Andrew Mitchell

Mitchell (above) accused the MP for Coventry South of using “florid language”.

Liberal Democrat MP Layla Moran, who has previously spoken of her family in Gaza, urged the Government to change its position and call for an immediate ceasefire.

She said: “What we are doing isn’t working, but there is one more thing we can do, which is to change how we vote at the UN Security Council. Will the UK stop abstaining and join the rest of the world in calling for that immediate ceasefire now?”

Mitchell replied: “The problem with calling for an immediate ceasefire is it may salve our consciences, but it is not deliverable because neither side in this appalling brutality… neither side is willing to embrace a ceasefire.

“That is why the policy of the British Government is to argue in every way we can for a pause, so that we can get the hostages out and get aid in, which can then lead to a sustainable ceasefire.”