David Cameron has been urged to recall Parliament from its summer recess to address the growing crisis in Iraq.
The world has watched images from the war-torn country in horror amid reports of the displacement and slaughter of minority Christians and Yazidis by Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, in northern Iraq.
A Downing Street source told Sky News the focus is entirely on humanitarian support, with no plans to recall MPs. In recent times, a recall has only been used when military options were on the table.
"The key priority is getting support to people in desperate need," the source said.
Displaced people from the Yazidi sect fleeing the violence in IraqThe source added Mr Cameron, who is currently on a family summer holiday in Portugal, was "in constant contact with senior ministers and officials" via phone calls and other means.
The Prime Minister is expected to return from the seaside town of Cascais later this week.
Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond this morning chaired an emergency meeting to discuss the crisis in Iraq.
The UK has been airdropping aid including tents, food and water in northern Iraq to help tens of thousands of displaced people across the region.
However, Tory backbencher Conor Burns said the Government's action of airdropping supplies in affected areas was "not strong enough" - and asserted the UK should join the US in airstrikes.
The Bournemouth West MP said he was not advocating a ground war, but believed Special Forces should be involved.
A British place prepared to airdrop aid over Iraq"I have been following this really closely for the last couple of weeks but having seen some of the images earlier I was quite seriously overcome," he said.
"These are brother and sister Christians, and this is happening to them in no small part because of our record in Iraq.
"These people are being beheaded by people from IS, and our only response is to drop some food or water on them.
"I think we should be answering positively requests from the Kurds to arm them. I think we should be looking at asylum."
The former head of the army, Lord Dannatt, also backed a parliamentary recall, insisting Britain was "watching in horror" as atrocities were committed.
The US has been carrying out targeted airstrikes in Iraq"In the face of a crisis of this scale, with the potential for so much human misery, this is not the moment for decision-makers to be on holiday," he wrote in the Sunday Telegraph.
Lord Dannatt said it may be necessary to put UK troops on the ground to direct air support.
"The United States in the lead and us in support. We all bear some responsibility," he told the BBC.
"The breakdown in society in Iraq post-2003, we have some culpability for that and so it is difficult for us to say 'Not our problem'."
Tory MPs Nick de Bois and David Burrowes also joined the calls for Parliament to be recalled.
In a letter to Mr Cameron, they said the persecution in Iraq imposed "a moral obligation and a duty to our constituents to reconvene so that the escalating crisis can be properly debated".
Muhammad Hamidur Rahamn has reportedly been killed in Syria. Pic: FacebookThe calls came as senior US officials announced the Obama administration has begun directly providing Kurdish forces with weapons to defend themselves against attacks by ISIS.
Meanwhile, it has been reported a Portsmouth man who went to Syria last October to fight with Islamic State militants has been killed.
Muhammad Hamidur Rahman, a 25-year-old former Primark supervisor, was reportedly part of a group of six jihadists from the British coastal city who went to fight President Bashar al Assad's forces.
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