A blast ripped through a Gaza hospital killing hundreds of people late Tuesday, sparking global condemnation and violent protests in several Muslim nations.
Israel and Palestinians traded blame for the incident, which an "outraged and deeply saddened" US President Joe Biden denounced while en route to the Middle East.
Health authorities in Gaza said the explosion at the Ahli Arab Hospital killed between 200 and 300 people and was caused by the latest in a wave of Israeli airstrikes. Hamas said in a statement 500 had died.
Israeli Defense Forces blamed Palestinian militants, saying an outgoing Islamic Jihad rocket misfired.
Neither account could be independently corroborated.
With thousands of people killed in conflict and the situation worsening, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called Wednesday for an "immediate humanitarian ceasefire".
On the ground in Gaza, there were scenes of chaos as the injured and dead were taken to nearby medical centres.
There, scores of bodies cloaked in blood-stained sheets and white plastic wrap lined the floors. Stunned relatives tried to identify loved ones.
"We were operating in the hospital. There was a strong explosion and the ceiling fell on the operating room," said Ghassan Abu Sittah, a doctor with the medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF).
"Hospitals are not a target," he said. "This bloodshed must stop. Enough is enough."
For 11 days, Israel has launched withering strikes on Hamas-controlled Gaza -- retaliation for the killing of 1,400 Israelis who were shot, mutilated and burned in October 7 cross-border raids.
Even amid the uncertainty over what caused the incident at the Christian-run hospital, there was rapid and widespread international condemnation.
"The responsibility for this crime must be clearly established & the perpetrators held accountable" said EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell.
From Tripoli to Tehran there was a furious response across the Muslim world.
Protestors in Jordan - home to millions of Palestinian refugees - tried to storm the Israeli embassy.
In Lebanon, demonstrators clashed with security forces outside the US embassy. Stones were hurled and a building set on fire.
The US State Department authorised the departure of "some non-emergency" personnel from the US Embassy in Beirut, citing the "unpredictable security situation."
Hezbollah, Lebanon's powerful Iran-backed armed militant group and political party, called for a "day of rage".
'Tough questions'
The horror of events at Ahli Arab Hospital and the swift backlash threatened to derail Biden's high-stakes visit to the Middle East, which gets underway Wednesday.
A four-way summit in Amman with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, Jordanian King Abdullah II and Egypt's president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi was cancelled.
It would be held "when the decision to stop the war and put an end to these massacres has been taken," said Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi.
The US president's visit to Israel will still go ahead.
He is expected to express solidarity with Israelis over the Hamas attacks, which also killed 31 Americans.
The attack was the worst in Israel's 75-year history, carrying painful echoes of past Pogroms and undermining faith in the country's security services.
The White House also wants to see steps to minimise the humanitarian impact of Israel's military response, allowing aid to enter the blockaded Gaza Strip.
International alarm has grown about the devastating impact of the war on Palestinian civilians.
About 3,000 Gazans have died in the air campaign, according to the Hamas-run health ministry -- including several senior figures in the organisation.
Entire neighbourhoods have been razed and survivors are left with dwindling supplies of food, water and fuel.
Washington also wants to prevent the conflict from spilling over into the West Bank, Lebanon and beyond.
Speaking aboard Air Force One, White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said Biden would ask Netanyahu "tough questions" about the path ahead.
Tens of thousands of Israeli troops have deployed to the border in preparation for a full-scale ground offensive.
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to "defeat Hamas" -- although the exact military objectives remain unclear.
'Corpses in the streets'
Before Tuesday's incident, the hospital in northern Gaza had sheltered the wounded and displaced from an intense Israeli bombing campaign.
Israel had warned one million residents of northern Gaza to flee south ahead of an expected ground invasion.
The Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby represents the Anglican church, which runs the Ahli Arab Hospital.
He said the hospital was one of several medical facilities in northern Gaza subject to evacuation orders and that it had already been hit by "Israeli rocket fire" on October 14, injuring four staff.
The UN works agency UNRWA says more than one million Palestinians -- almost half of Gaza's population of 2.4 million -- have fled their homes.
"There are corpses in the streets. Buildings are crashing down on their inhabitants," said Jamil Abdullah, a Palestinian-Swede, hoping to flee the blockaded enclave.
"The smell of the dead is everywhere."
In Israel, dozens of mourners gathered for the funeral of five members of the same family killed when militants attacked their kibbutz at Kfar Aza.
All five coffins were draped in Israeli flags.
Diplomatic bids to free at least 199 hostages taken by Hamas have gathered pace.
Turkey said it was in talks with Hamas to secure their release.
Hamas has released a video of one of the captives, French-Israeli woman Mia Shem.
Her mother, Keren Shem, made an emotional plea for her safe return. "I am begging the world to bring my baby back home," she told a news conference in Tel Aviv.