French President Emmanuel Macron conveyed to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday that the Gaza death toll was deemed “unacceptable” and emphasized that Israel’s operations in the region must stop.

French President Emmanuel Macron told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday that the Gaza death toll is “intolerable” and that Israel’s operations there “must cease,” the President’s office said.

In a telephone call that saw Macron toughen his tone, the French leader expressed France’s firm opposition to an Israeli offensive in the southern Gaza city of Rafah. He said it could only lead to a humanitarian disaster of a new magnitude and create a new risk of regional escalation, according to a statement from the presidential Élysée Palace.

The French leader stressed that a ceasefire agreement should be reached “without further delay,” adding that such a deal should “guarantee the protection of all civilians and the massive inflow of emergency aid.”

Macron said that the lack of sufficient access to “a population in an absolute humanitarian emergency is unjustifiable,” his office relayed.

He continued that it is “imperative to open the Port of Ashdod” in Israel north of the Gaza Strip, “a direct land route from Jordan and all the crossing points.”

The French leader also urged “the Prime Minister and all Israeli leaders to have the courage to offer their fellow citizens a future of peace,” which he believes only the “creation of a Palestinian state” can achieve, the statement said.

On Tuesday, France said it was imposing sanctions against 28 “extremist Israeli settlers” whom it accuses of committing human rights abuses against Palestinian civilians in the occupied West Bank.

France would also be seeking sanctions at the European level, the Foreign Ministry said.

Khalil Wakim, with AFP