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Israel-Iran live: Blast 'destroys prison gates' as Israeli strikes target 'heart of Tehran'; Iran's supreme leader sends letter to Putin

Iran has asked Russia's Vladimir Putin for help today, while vowing revenge against the US for its strikes on nuclear facilities at the weekend. Meanwhile, Israel continues to attack Iran. Watch our experts answer your questions from 4.45pm, and follow the latest on the conflict, below.

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Send us your questions after US strikes on Iran

International affairs editor Dominic Waghorn and chief correspondent Stuart Ramsay will be answering your questions in a live Q&A at 4.45pm today. 

Submit yours in the form at the top of the page.

Explosions heard in southwest Iran

Iranian media is reporting an explosion has been heard in the southwest.

According to Fars news agency, air defences have been activated in the city of Ahvaz.

UK confirms RAF flight has evacuated British citizens from Israel

Foreign Secretary David Lammy has confirmed that an RAF flight evacuated British citizens from Israel to Cyprus today.

Speaking to MPs in the House of Commons, he says the group will be brought home "this evening", and more flights will follow.

Lammy says a booking portal opened yesterday for those British citizens in Israel who want to leave.

Going forward, he says those with the "greatest need" will be prioritised.

The foreign secretary again urged people in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories to register their presence with the British embassy to receive the latest updates.

Sky News understands that the UK's chief rabbi, Sir Ephraim Mirvis, was aboard the flight as he had been in Israel.

UK follows US in telling citizens in Qatar to 'shelter in place'

The UK's Foreign Office has followed the American example by telling British citizens in Qatar to "shelter in place".

Earlier, the US issued the same warning to Americans in Qatar.

Qatar's foreign ministry insisted the advice did not reflect the situation in the country.

The Foreign Office said: "Following a US security alert for US nationals in Qatar, out of an abundance of caution, we recommend that British nationals in Qatar shelter in place until further notice. 

"Follow instructions from local authorities."

Further updates will be issued as the situation develops, the Foreign Office added.

Iran could attack American forces 'soon', sources tell Reuters

The US believes Iran could carry out retaliatory attacks targeting American forces in the Middle East soon, two US officials have told Reuters.

One of the officials said the attack could happen within the next day or two.

But the sources also told Reuters that Washington was looking for a diplomatic resolution.

Trump's intervention over the weekend has raised fears of an escalation in the region.

While Trump repeatedly said on the presidential campaign trail last year that the US should not be involved in what he called "forever wars", over the weekend the US struck three nuclear sites in Iran.

Trump then warned against retaliation by Iran, saying it would be "met with force far greater than what was witnessed" over the weekend.

IDF warns Tehran residents to 'stay away' from military areas

The IDF has issued a warning to residents in Tehran, telling them to stay away from certain areas in the coming days.

In a message on X, the IDF said Israel's army would "continue to strike military targets in the Tehran area".

"For your safety, we ask you to stay away from weapons manufacturing plants, military headquarters, and security institutions affiliated with the regime," the IDF said in a statement.

Watch foreign secretary update MPs on Israel-Iran conflict

David Lammy, the UK's foreign secretary, is updating MPs now on the Israel-Iran conflict.

It comes following weekend strikes by the US on Iranian nuclear sites.

You can watch and follow the speech via our Politics Hub - just click below.

US strikes on Iran 'did not violate international law', Rutte says

Back to Mark Rutte, who has been taking questions from reporters ahead of the NATO summit.

Asked about the US strikes on Iran over the weekend, he has said America did not violate international law.

Trump said over the weekend that the strikes caused "monumental damage". However, the scale of the destruction is not yet clear.

Watch: Will Putin step in to support Iran?

As we've been reporting, Iran's foreign minister met Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin earlier today.

Abbas Araghchi brought Putin a letter from Iran's supreme leader, asking for more help from Russia after the attacks by Israel and the US.

The Kremlin described it as a good meeting. But prior to the visit, sources in Iran suggested they had hoped for more support from Russia.

Ivor Bennett, our Moscow correspondent, explains the background to the Russian-Iranian relationship, and what Putin is likely to do next.

Trump: Keep oil prices down

Donald Trump has urged companies to keep "oil prices down" or risk "playing right into the hands of the enemy" as fears  rise that ongoing fighting in the Middle East could cause them to spike.

The US president had this to say on Truth Social in the last hour...

On Sunday, Trump called into question the future of Iran's ruling government after a surprise attack on three of the country鈥檚 nuclear sites.

His bombardment of three sites in Iran quickly sparked debate in Congress over his authority to launch the strikes, with many Republicans praising Trump for decisive action even as many Democrats - and some from Trump's own party, too - warned he should have sought congressional approval.

Plans to proscribe protest group Palestine Action 'irrational', member says

UK government plans to proscribe Palestine Action, effectively branding it as a terrorist organisation, are "irrational", a member of the protest group has said.

The group targeted RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire last week, and vandalised two military planes.

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper is preparing a written ministerial statement which would make becoming a member of the group illegal.

Palestine Action member Saeed Farouk told Wilfred Frost on Sky News Breakfast earlier it was a "knee-jerk reaction from the government".

It is trying to "rush" the ban through based on the fact the group "was able to humiliate them and show serious flaws in the defences of the RAF base itself," Farouk argued.

He said the proposal was "absurd" and he could not speculate at this point what the plans were for the group if proscribed.

"It is a Britain-based, civil society-based action group. It will put the group on a list of people like ISIS, which is irrational. It makes no sense whatsoever," he added.

Asked if the group regretted the decision to target the RAF base, Farouk said: "Not at all.

"We're in the middle of one of the most widely documented genocides, not only in my lifetime, but in history. 

"The British people have made it absolutely clear that they won't accept the government's role in the genocide, the government's role in supporting Israel, and the only way that the British people have found to stop it is to be directly involved in breaking the material chain. 

"This is what was necessary."