Tag: Gaza

  • Trump releases AI video promoting vision for ‘Trump Gaza’

    Trump releases AI video promoting vision for ‘Trump Gaza’

    U.S. President Donald Trump has released a video generated by artificial intelligence (AI) promoting his vision for the future of the Gaza Strip.

    The 30-second clip, shared on the president’s Truth Social platform on Wednesday, begins with images of fighters and children in ragged clothes among ruins with the caption “Gaza 2025.”

    The scenery then changes dramatically, showing futuristic skyscrapers, sun-drenched beach promenades and a huge golden statue of Trump.

    A man resembling Trump’s adviser Elon Musk appears several times in the video, eating hummus in an outdoor restaurant or walking on the beach as banknotes fall from the sky above him.

    A car made by Musk’s Tesla brand can also be seen driving through a busy bazaar.

    Trump himself is shown with a belly dancer in a nightclub and later lying next to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on a sun lounger, both wearing swimming trunks and drinking cocktails.

    The phrase “Trump Gaza” appears several times throughout the video on signs and buildings.

    In one shot, bearded men can be seen dancing on the beach, wearing long skirts, bikini tops and green headbands which resemble those worn by fighters of the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas.

    The AI video is accompanied by a song which includes the line: “Donald is coming to set you free … No more tunnels, no more fear: Trump Gaza is finally here.”

    Trump recently sparked outrage among Arab nations and rights groups by proposing to resettle Gaza’s approximately 2 million inhabitants to Arab states and transform the devastated coastal area into a “Riviera of the Middle East” controlled by the United States.

    While Netanyahu welcomed Trump’s plan, experts emphasised that forced resettlement would violate international law.

  • Egypt announces reconstruction plan for Gaza

    Egypt announces reconstruction plan for Gaza

    In the face of pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump, Egypt has announced its own reconstruction plan for the largely destroyed Gaza Strip.

    “Egypt expresses its aspiration to cooperate with the U.S. administration to achieve a comprehensive and just peace in the region by reaching a just settlement of the Palestinian.

    “This is the cause that upholds the rights of the region’s peoples,” said a statement by the Foreign Ministry in Cairo.

    The  statement went on to say that the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip must be carried out.

    “In a manner that ensures the Palestinian people remain in their homeland and aligns with their legitimate and legal rights.’’

    Egypt said a two-state solution, which provides for Israel and a Palestinian state to coexist as independent states, is “the only path to stability and coexistence among the region’s peoples.’’

    One week ago Trump proposed the U.S. take over and level the war-ruined coastal territory, resettle the nearly two million Palestinians living there.

    They were all engage in a massive rebuilding effort to create the riviera of the Middle East.

    Trump on Tuesday once again spoke of Gaza’s value in real estate terms, noting that it’s fronting on the sea.

    The U.S. president has said he expects to be able to strike a deal with Israel’s neighbours Egypt and Jordan for the relocation of the Palestinians.

    However, both countries have vehemently rejected the idea of accommodating Palestinians from the Gaza Strip.

    The plan has sparked fierce criticism from Washington’s allies and adversaries alike, although Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has praised the idea.

    Jordan to take in 2,000 sick Gaza children – PM

    Meanwhile, Jordan is ready to receive 2,000 sick Gaza children for medical treatment, as the healthcare system in the coastal enclave has been devastated, Prime Minister Jaafar Hassan announced on Wednesday.

    Hassan reaffirmed Jordan’s clear and unwavering position that there should be no resettlement nor displacement of Palestinians.

    No solutions to the Palestinian issue should come at Jordan’s expense, Hassan said during a parliamentary session.

    Jordan would not act unilaterally on matters concerning the future of Palestine and the region, he added.

    He said that the country was working with Arab nations, alongside Egypt and Palestinians, to formulate a unified and clear Arab position on Gaza’s reconstruction.

    “Supporting Palestinians’ resilience and defending their just rights are at the core of Jordan’s efforts.

    “And a just resolution to the Palestinian cause based on the establishment of an independent Palestinian state is the foundation of achieving regional security, stability and peace.”

    He added that Jordan’s stability and security, and the protection of its people, were paramount.

    Hassan’s remarks came a day after Jordanian King Abdullah II rejected U.S. President Donald Trump’s proposal to relocate Palestinians in the Gaza Strip during his visit to Washington.

    Earlier, Trump had proposed that the U.S. should take control of Gaza and that the Palestinians be relocated to neighbouring Jordan and Egypt, which had been widely condemned.

    Trump later threatened that the U.S. “could conceivably withhold aid” from Jordan and Egypt if the two countries did not agree to receive Palestinians.

  • Gaza to be transform into ‘diamond’ – Trump

    Gaza to be transform into ‘diamond’ – Trump

    President Donald Trump once again brushed aside international outrage over his plan to take control of Gaza, saying the United States could help transform it into a “diamond.”

    “We’re going to take it, we’re going to hold it, we’re going to cherish it,” Trump said during a meeting with Jordan’s King Abdullah II at the White House.

    “We’re going to get it going eventually, where a lot of jobs are going to be created for the people in the Middle East,” Trump continued.

    “It’s going to be for the people in the Middle East. But I think it could be a diamond.

    “It could be an absolute tremendous asset for the Middle East and you’re going to have peace. It’s going to bring peace in the Middle East.”

    A week ago, Trump proposed the United States “take over” and level the war-ruined coastal territory, resettle the nearly 2 million Palestinians living there, and engage in a massive rebuilding effort to create the “riviera of the Middle East.”

    Trump on Wednesday once again spoke of Gaza’s value in real estate terms, noting that it’s fronting on the sea.

    The plan has sparked fierce criticism from Washington’s allies and adversaries alike, although Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has welcomed the idea.

    Trump has said he expects to be able to strike a deal with Israel’s neighbours Egypt and Jordan for the relocation of the Palestinians.

    However, both countries have vehemently rejected the idea of accommodating Palestinians from the Gaza Strip.

    Sitting beside Trump before going into a closed-door meeting, Abdullah did not speak to their differences directly.

    “I think the point is: How do we make this work in a way that is good for everybody?,” the king said in front of reporters.

    Obviously we have to look at the best interests of the United States, of the people in the region, especially to my people of Jordan.

    Abdullah announced that Jordan would take in 2,000 sick children from Gaza.(

  • Turkey rejects Trump’s relocation plan for Gaza Strip

    Turkey rejects Trump’s relocation plan for Gaza Strip

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has rejected U.S. plans to relocate Palestinians from the Gaza Strip and instead calls on Israel to rebuild the extensively destroyed coastal area.

    “From our perspective, the proposals aiming to displace the Palestinians from the land they have lived on for thousands of years are not to be taken seriously.’’

    Kuala Lumpur, Erdoğan stated this at a conference in the Malaysian capital on Monday.

    He added, “No one has the power to inflict a second Nakba on the Palestinian people, nor will they ever have.’’

    The term Nakba, from the Arabic for catastrophe, refers to the flight and displacement of more than 700,000 Palestinians in the first Middle East war in 1948 following the establishment of the Israeli state.

    Erdoğan further asserted that instead of seeking a new place for the people of Gaza, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should be held accountable for the damages.

    He said the all the damages inflicted during the military operation against the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas in Gaza, Netanyahu was responsible.

    U.S. President Donald Trump reiterated his much-criticised plans on Sunday to displace the Palestinians from the Gaza Strip.

    Trump intended to relocate the Palestinians and “is committed to buying and owning’’ the Gaza Strip.

    The expulsion of more than  two million people would contravene international law, with the United Nations warning of “ethnic cleansing.’’

  • Germany’s Scholz issues ‘complete rejection’ of Trump Gaza plan

    Germany’s Scholz issues ‘complete rejection’ of Trump Gaza plan

    German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Friday rejected U.S. President Donald Trump’s proposal to resettle Palestinians from the Gaza Strip.

    “We must not resettle the population of Gaza to Egypt,” Scholz said at a campaign event in the south-western German city of Ludwigsburg, emphasising his “complete rejection” of Trump’s plan.

    Scholz said that everything must be done to prevent a further escalation in the Middle East, and to ensure peaceful coexistence between a future Palestinian state and Israel.

    After a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier this week, Trump announced that the United States would “take over” the Gaza Strip and transform it into the “Riviera of the Middle East.”

    According to Trump’s plan, the Palestinian inhabitants of the area would be removed from Gaza and accommodated in other Arab states.

    The statement was met with international criticism and outrage from Arab states.

    Other U.S. officials later sought to qualify Trump’s plans, even as the U.S. president doubled-down on his assertion in a post on his Truth Social platform.

    “It was not meant as a hostile move,” asserted U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, calling the comments a “very generous offer.”

    In his Truth Social post, Trump said that Palestinians would have the chance to be happy, safe and free elsewhere.

    He said U.S. would partner with “great development teams” to build “one of the greatest and most spectacular developments of its kind on Earth.”

  • S/Arabia rejects Trump’s U.S. Gaza takeover proposal

    S/Arabia rejects Trump’s U.S. Gaza takeover proposal

    The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia says it has “unequivocally rejected” Trump’s proposal for the U.S. to take over the Gaza Strip, a Palestine territory.

    A statement from the country’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Saudi Arabia was vehemently opposed to the idea, and would rather continue its efforts to establish an independent Palestinian state.

    Saudi Arabia stressed that Palestinians would “not move” from their land and it would not normalise ties with Israel without the establishment of a Palestinian state.

    “The Ministry of Foreign Affairs affirms that the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s position on the establishment of a Palestinian state is firm and unwavering.

    “His Royal Highness, Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, Crown Prince and Prime Minister, clearly and unequivocally reaffirmed this stance during his speech at the opening of the first session of the ninth term of the Shura Council on Sept. 18, 2024.

    “His Royal Highness emphasised that Saudi Arabia will continue its relentless efforts to establish an independent Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital, and will not establish diplomatic relations with Israel without that,” the statement said.

    It further said that the Crown Prince and Prime Minister also reiterated this firm position during the extraordinary Arab-Islamic Summit held in Riyadh on Nov. 11, 2024.

    The ministry emphasised the continuation of efforts to establish a Palestinian state based on the 1967 borders with East Jerusalem as its capital, demanding an end to the Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands.

    The Saudi government also urged more peace-loving countries to recognise the State of Palestine, noting the importance of mobilising the international community to support the Palestinian people’s rights.

    According to the ministry, this is in line with the United Nations General Assembly resolutions, recognising Palestine’s eligibility for full UN membership.

    “The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia also reaffirms its unequivocal rejection of any infringement on the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people, whether through Israeli settlement policies, land annexation, or attempts to displace the Palestinian people from their land.

    “The international community has a duty today to alleviate the severe humanitarian suffering endured by the Palestinian people, who will remain steadfast on their land and will not move from it.

    “The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia emphasises that this unwavering position is non-negotiable and not subject to compromises,” the statement further said.

    “Achieving lasting and just peace is impossible without the Palestinian people obtaining their legitimate rights in accordance with international resolutions, as has been previously clarified to both the former and current U.S. administrations,” it added.

    Trump had told reporters at the White House on Tuesday, alongside the visiting Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the U.S. was mulling the takeover of Gaza.

    “The U.S. will take over the Gaza Strip, and we will do a good job with it too.

    “We’ll own it and be responsible for dismantling all of the dangerous unexploded bombs and other weapons on the site, level the site, and get rid of the destroyed buildings.

    “Palestinians living in Gaza would have to be relocated to create the ‘Riviera of the Middle East,’ as they will be housed in Jordan, Egypt and other countries,” he said.

    Most of Gaza’s 2.1 million population has been displaced by the 15-month war between Israel and Hamas.

    NAN reports that Trump’s proposal, which was his first major remarks on his Middle East foreign policy has shattered decades of U.S. thinking on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

  • Netanyahu praises Trump’s plan to relocate Palestinians from Gaza

    Netanyahu praises Trump’s plan to relocate Palestinians from Gaza

    Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has defended U.S. President Donald Trump’s plan to relocate Palestinians from Gaza, brushing aside international criticism of the proposal.

    Netanyahu called Trump’s plan, which would involve relocating hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, “the first good idea’’ he has heard, during an interview with Fox News late on Wednesday.

    He framed the plan as a temporary relocation for the benefit of the residents, in spite of critics arguing that it could lead to the permanent displacement of around two million people.

    Netanyahu backed the idea of allowing Gazans who want to leave to leave.

    “I mean, what’s wrong with that? They can leave, and they can then come back, they can relocate and come back. But you have to rebuild Gaza.’’

    Trump’s proposal offers the chance to “create a different future for everyone.’’

    Following a meeting with Netanyahu at the White House on Tuesday, Trump left many observers stunned by saying the U.S. would take over the Gaza Strip.

    That he supports that the Palestinians living in the territory should be relocated to other countries.

    Trump added that Gaza could become the Riviera of the Middle East where anyone, including Palestinians, could live.

    The devastating war in Gaza was triggered by the attacks led by the Palestinian militant organisation Hamas on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

    In the attack, 1,200 people were killed and more than 250 abducted.

    The coastal strip is in ruins and experiencing a humanitarian catastrophe.

    More than 47,400 people have been killed, according to the Hamas-controlled health authority.

    The number does not distinguish between civilians and fighters.

  • Militants in Gaza free more Israeli hostages after 484 days

    Militants in Gaza free more Israeli hostages after 484 days

    Palestinian militants released three more hostages in the Gaza Strip on Saturday as part of the fragile Israel-Hamas ceasefire deal.

    Yarden Bibas, 35, and French-Israeli citizen Ofer Calderon, 54, were handed over to representatives of the Red Cross in Khan Younis in the south of the Gaza Strip.

    About two hours later, US-Israeli citizen Keith Siegel, 65, was freed in Gaza City. With his release, Saturday’s hostage handovers were complete.

    In exchange, Israel was to release 183 Palestinian prisoners.

    The hostages kidnapped 484 days ago were taken to an Israeli military base, where they were to meet their families.

    They are then to be transferred to hospitals.

    A truce in Gaza has been held for nearly two weeks.

    Four swaps have freed 18 hostages and hundreds of Palestinian detainees.

    A three-phase ceasefire agreement that went into effect on Jan. 19 aims to achieve a permanent end to the fighting and the release of all hostages still being held by the Iran-backed Hamas militia and their extremist allies.

    After the release of the three abductees on Saturday, 79 hostages are still being held in the Gaza Strip, 35 of whom are presumed dead by Israel.

    Another exchange of hostages and prisoners is set for next weekend.

    During this initial six-week stage, 33 Israeli hostages are due to be released in exchange for 1,904 Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli prisons.

    Hamas has said that eight of the 33 hostages on the list for release during this phase are dead.

    It is unclear who exactly they are.

    Yarden Bibas was kidnapped from kibbutz Nir Oz alongside his wife Shiri and two sons Kfir and Ariel. Kfir was just nine months old when militants took him.

    All four are scheduled for release in the first phase of the agreement, but there is grave concern over the fate of Kfir, Ariel, and Shiri.

    Hamas has claimed the three were killed in Israeli attacks in the early months of the war, but Israel has never confirmed their deaths.

    Ofer Kalderon, a 54-year-old carpenter, also lived in kibbutz Nir Oz.

    Militants kidnapped him along with his children, who were 11 and 16 years old at the time.

    All are French citizens. His son and daughter were released almost two months later as part of the first Gaza agreement.

    Kalderon’s son reportedly watched militants beat his father bloody and set fire to the family home.

    Keith Siegel was kidnapped from his home in Kibbutz Kfar Aza along with his wife Aviva.

    Militants drove the Siegels into the Gaza Strip in their car at gunpoint.

    Aviva was released along with some 100 other hostages during a week-long ceasefire in November 2023.

    She said they broke her husband’s ribs during the kidnapping.

    According to media reports, his mother died in the U.S. while he was being held hostage.

    Meanwhile, the transfer in Khan Younis and the one in Gaza City proceeded calmly on Saturday morning – unlike the chaotic conditions surrounding the release of eight Israeli and Thai hostages on Thursday, when crowds swarmed around the frightened-looking captives.

    After these threatening scenes, Israel demanded that the countries that brokered the ceasefire agreement compel Hamas to keep the transfers orderly.

    Terrorists from Hamas and other extremist groups killed around 1,200 people in their attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, and took more than 250 Israelis hostage to the Gaza Strip.

    The attack triggered the war in the sealed-off coastal area, where more than 47,400 people have been killed since then, according to the Hamas-controlled health authority.

    The number does not distinguish between civilians and fighters.

  • Trump stops $50m approved by Biden administration for ‘condoms in Gaza’

    Trump stops $50m approved by Biden administration for ‘condoms in Gaza’

    The White House justified a sweeping freeze in US overseas assistance by citing a $50 million condom distribution program in the Gaza Strip, without offering evidence to back up the claim.

    White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the expenditure was discovered in Trump’s first week including by the new Department of Government Efficiency led by tech billionaire Elon Musk.

    Musk’s initiative and the budget office “found that there was about to be 50 million taxpayer dollars that went out the door to fund condoms in Gaza,” Leavitt told her debut press conference.

    “That is a preposterous waste of taxpayer money,” she said.

    She did not provide more details and it was not immediately possible to verify the account independently.

    Condoms generally cost less than one dollar each in the United States and much less in bulk. Just over two million people live in Gaza, nearly all of which has been heavily damaged in the 15-month war with Israel.

    Leavitt also said that the United States was about to dispense $37 million to the World Health Organization before Trump announced a pullout from the UN body.

    Quickly after taking office, Trump ordered a 90-day freeze in foreign assistance.

    He has vowed a review to ensure that aid conforms with policies of his administration, which opposes abortion, transgender rights and diversity programs.

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio in a memo Friday said that the United States was freezing nearly all aid disbursement except for emergency food and military aid to Egypt and Israel.

    UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres voiced concern about the aid freeze by the United States, long the world’s largest provider of development assistance in absolute dollar terms.

  • Billions of Dollars needed to rebuild Gaza – UN

    Billions of Dollars needed to rebuild Gaza – UN

    The United Nations on Monday said that based on its assessments billions of dollars would be needed to rebuild Gaza after the war between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas.

    A ceasefire between Israel and Hamas took effect on Sunday, suspending a 15-month-old war that has devastated the Gaza Strip and inflamed the Middle East.

    According to Israeli tallies, the Hamas attack on Israel killed 1,200 people while Israel’s retaliation has killed more than 46,000 people, according to Gaza’s health ministry.

    The UN damage assessment released this month showed that clearing over 50 million tonnes of rubble left in the aftermath of Israel’s bombardment could take 21 years and cost up to 1.2 billion dollars.

    The debris is believed to be contaminated with asbestos, with some refugee camps struck during the war known to have been built with the material.

    The rubble also likely holds human remains which the Palestinian Ministry of Health estimates that 10,000 bodies are missing under the debris.

    A United Nations Development Programme official said on Sunday that development in Gaza has been set back by 69 years as a result of the conflict.

    According to a UN report released in 2024, rebuilding Gaza’s shattered homes will take at least until 2040, but could drag on for many decades.

    The report said two-thirds of Gaza’s pre-war structures, over 170,000 buildings have been damaged or flattened, according to UN satellite data (UNOSAT) in December and that amounts to around 69 per cent of the total structures in the Gaza Strip.

    According to an estimate from UNOSAT within the count are a total of 245,123 housing units, currently, over 1.8 million people need emergency shelter in Gaza, the UN humanitarian office said.

    The report estimated that the damage to infrastructure totalled 18.5 billion dollars as of end-Jan. 2024, affecting residential buildings, commerce, industry, and essential services such as education, health, and energy, a UN World Bank report said. It has not provided a more recent estimate for that figure.

    An update by the UN humanitarian office showed that less than a quarter of the pre-war water supplies were available, while at least 68 per cent of the road network had been damaged.

    Satellite images analyzed by the United Nations show more than half of Gaza’s agricultural land, crucial for feeding the war-ravaged territory’s hungry population, has been degraded by conflict.

    The data reveals a rise in the destruction of orchards, field crops and vegetables in the Palestinian enclave, where hunger is widespread after 15 months of Israeli bombardment.

    The UN Food and Agriculture Organization said in 2024 that 15,000 cattle, or over 95 per cent of the total had been slaughtered or died since the conflict began and nearly half the sheep.

    Palestinian data shows that the conflict has led to the destruction of over 200 government facilities, 136 schools and universities, 823 mosques and three churches.

    The UN humanitarian office’s report showed that many hospitals have been damaged during the conflict, with only 17 out of 36 units partially functional as of January.

    Amnesty International’s Crisis Evidence Lab has highlighted the extent of destruction along Gaza’s eastern boundary.

    As of May 2024, over 90 per cent of the buildings in this area, including more than 3,500 structures, were either destroyed or severely damaged.