logo
Middle East crisis: Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff meets Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu; ceasefire on agenda

Middle East crisis: Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff meets Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu; ceasefire on agenda

Time of India2 days ago
Steve Witkoff (ANI image) and Benjamin Netanyahu (AP image)
US President
Donald Trump
's special envoy, Steve Witkoff, arrived in Israel on Thursday to discuss the worsening humanitarian condition in Gaza as the death toll of Palestinians waiting for food and other aid continues to rise.
The meeting between Witkoff and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ended, according to an Israeli official, as reported by CNN.
Witkoff's visit coincided with new US sanctions targeting officials from the Western-backed Palestinian Authority. He had been expected to meet with Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu
to talk about the crisis in Gaza and the possibility of a ceasefire.
This marks the first meeting between Witkoff and Netanyahu since both the Israeli and US delegations withdrew from negotiations in Qatar last week.
At the time, Witkoff stated that Hamas 'shows a lack of desire' to reach a truce.
Under growing international pressure, Israel announced new measures over the weekend to allow more humanitarian aid into Gaza. However, aid agencies say the current efforts fall short. The Israeli defense body in charge of coordinating humanitarian aid in Gaza said 270 trucks of aid entered Gaza on Wednesday and 32 pallets of aid were airdropped into the Strip.
However, humanitarian groups say that at least 500 to 600 trucks per day are needed in Gaza.
International criticism of Israel's handling of the Gaza crisis has intensified. Several organizations have warned that Gaza has been at risk of famine for two years, and that a complete aid blockade for more than two months has now pushed the situation into what they describe as an unfolding famine.
German foreign minister Johann Wadephul is also visiting Israel and the West Bank over the next two days.
While Germany has long supported Israel, it has recently become more vocal in urging Israel to increase aid to Gaza and support a ceasefire.
Unlike France, Britain and Canada, Germany has not announced plans to recognize a Palestinian state in September. However, before his departure, Wadephul emphasized that Germany sees a two-state solution as the only path to lasting peace and security for both Israelis and Palestinians.
'For Germany, the recognition of a Palestinian state stands rather at the end of the process. But such a process must begin now. Germany will not move from this aim," Wadephul said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Two visions of Berlin pride: Club music at one event, mourning for Gaza at the other
Two visions of Berlin pride: Club music at one event, mourning for Gaza at the other

Scroll.in

time5 minutes ago

  • Scroll.in

Two visions of Berlin pride: Club music at one event, mourning for Gaza at the other

There were two pride marches in Berlin on July 26. One, organised by CSD Berlin, a registered NGO, was supported by major brands and corporations. Trucks bearing corporate logos rolled through the streets. Brand slogans floated on flags, club-style music blared from sound systems. Behind them, groups of revellers danced, posed, and marched in festive clusters. In keeping with Berlin's character, it is a technicolour procession, heavy on spectacle. 'This is a party,' said Yassi, 24, who works in hospitality. She identifies as lesbian. I was with two other queer friends, Lisa and Charlie. We had taken the S-Bahn from Potsdam to Berlin and reached the Victory Column just as the CSD parade reached its final stop behind the Brandenburg Gate. The mood there was jubilant, and familiar, much like the previous three prides I had attended. But we weren't staying. We turned and left for the second march: the Internationalist Queer Pride. Charlie, our usual route-finder, found us a back way after metro stations nearby were blocked off. On the Telegram channel, IQP had just posted an alert: the police had attacked the demonstration; the march had temporarily stopped. More updates followed, hinting at escalating tensions. Days earlier, the organisers had issued an advisory, not on party etiquette and sunscreen, but on protest safety. 'Carry a lawyer's number; avoid oil-based creams that worsen the effects of pepper spray; stay calm, stay together.' The anticipation of arrest and police action was evident. It was a sober primer for navigating a demonstration under duress, a telling indicator of how Berlin's police treats political dissent. The Internationalist Queer Pride insisted that pride remains a political demonstration, anti-racist, anti-capitalist and internationalist in makeup. There were no trucks or floats. It was attended by blocks from a wide range of marginalised collectives, disability and minority groups and migrant organisations. The speeches were raw and unsparing. They conjured not rainbow euphemisms, but Gaza, hunger, incarceration, and memory. They spoke of 'every child in Gaza crying from hunger… dying from the hunger that wraps itself around every cell'. They spoke of stones, not as metaphors, but as resistance – recalling Faris Odeh, the 14-year-old killed by Israeli forces after hurling rocks at tanks during the Second Intifada. The International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network denounced 'pinkwashing' – the appropriation of queer rights to obscure state violence. 'The Israeli Occupation Forces flies rainbow flags over ruins they have bombed,' one speaker said. 'Zionism has never made Jews safer, only the world more dangerous.' For context: in the West Bank, the Israeli state continues to authorise settlement expansion in violation of international law. Just this week, Awdah Hathaleen, a Palestinian activist from Masafer Yatta, featured in the award-winning documentary No Other Land, was killed near Umm al-Khair. He was 31. He had three children. He was killed by Yinon Levi, a Jewish settler previously sanctioned by the Biden administration, whose sanctions were later reversed under Trump. We reached the scene near Cottbusser Damm. On a canal wall, a banner read: 'No genocide in anti-semitism.' Nearby, three masked figures stood behind an Antifa flag. One held a placard delcaring, 'Against antisemitism and hate of Israel.' I heard a heated exchange. A woman called the IQP march anti-Semitic. A cyclist had paused beside two women in disagreement. 'It's a queer march,' he insisted. 'Not against Jewish people.' One woman scoffed and shifted the argument, 'You know why there's no ceasefire? Hamas pulled the plug last minute,' before clapping her hands and gesturing dismissively. The entire road was swamped with police officers, police surveillance vehicles and dog squads. We continued. The demo approached. There were no corporate trucks. One placard read, 'Queer as in Free Palestine.' Another asked, 'Who were you before you obeyed into silence?' A long black banner stretched across the street: 'Germany you cry 'never again' while funding it again.' On the reverse: 'If Jewish life is safe only in Israel, what does that say about Germany?' I spotted Yassi. 'This is where I belong,' she said. 'Not the other pride. This reminds me why we do this, why we march. It's political, it's for freedom, it's for everyone.' I asked if she was worried about police violence or feared arrest. 'I'm relatively privileged,' she said. 'I'm German-Moroccan and I pass as white. My risk is lower than others who've faced violence.' The march was halted. A line of police blocked the road. A group of officers charged into the crowd. There was panic among people. The police pinned an individual to the ground. The crowd chanted, 'Let them go!' Others tried to protect a demonstrator being dragged. As a photojournalist and immigrant in Germany, I was frightened. I have read about such police violence, watched videos from a safe distance. But being there, seeing it unfold metres from me, hearing people scream, watching someone pinned to the pavement, their shirt pulled over their head, it was something else entirely. It was not televised, but immediate. I stayed. The police dissolved the protest, citing threats to public safety. IQP legal observers contested it, arguing the protest had been peaceful. At the time of writing, their challenge remains unresolved. I met Sandra, a German-American woman. 'We were peaceful,' she said. 'Even when police attacked people without reason. Who are they protecting? Who are we threatening? The people are cheering us from their windows. They are not threatened.' Sandra, who grew up in East Germany, continued, 'The German police today aren't different from Nazi police.' I ask her what she thinks of freedom of assembly, democracy in Germany. Sandra's friend added, 'We're fucked. There is no freedom. They'd never treat a Zionist march like this.' While we spoke, a woman was thrown to the ground. Her shirt ripped up, her bare chest scraped against the street. People shouted, 'At least show respect for the frau.' A woman in a blue vest, perhaps part of the organising team, pleaded with police to let participants leave safely. She moved from one officer to the next, make her request. I took photos, then tried to approach the police vehicle where demonstrators were being taken. A line of officers closed in, shielding the police van. One of the officers pushed me. I stated clearly that I was a journalist and duty bound to record their actions. My camera was brushed aside without acknowledgment. I was pushed further. They moved forward as a wall. I was forced backwards. There are moments when the work of reporting blurs with the impulse to flee, to protect oneself. I was torn between documenting this story and being a part of it – between being a witness and being seen, suspended between being a body in the crowd and the one meant to observe it.

Hamas Attacks IDF Soldiers With Hidden Bombs In Gaza, Blows Up Convoy Routes
Hamas Attacks IDF Soldiers With Hidden Bombs In Gaza, Blows Up Convoy Routes

Time of India

time5 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Hamas Attacks IDF Soldiers With Hidden Bombs In Gaza, Blows Up Convoy Routes

Chilling new footage shows Hamas fighters in Khan Younis burying and detonating three barrel bombs aimed at an Israeli armored vehicle. The video, reportedly filmed Monday, captures the moment of explosion as thick black smoke engulfs the road. Hamas claims IDF casualties, though Israel has not confirmed. This comes amid rising violence across Gaza, with over 80 Palestinians reported killed in Israeli strikes on Friday.

'Ask White House': India On US' Nobel Prize Pitch For Donald Trump
'Ask White House': India On US' Nobel Prize Pitch For Donald Trump

NDTV

time9 minutes ago

  • NDTV

'Ask White House': India On US' Nobel Prize Pitch For Donald Trump

New Delhi: India on Friday said the White House should be asked the question of whether President Donald Trump should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his role in brokering multiple peace deals and ceasefires since his return to power in January. "My view is that it would be better if you direct that question to the White House itself," Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal told a reporter when asked about the White House's Nobel Peace Prize pitch for Mr Trump. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt on Thursday said Mr Trump should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, claiming that the US President ended several conflicts around the world, including the one between India and Pakistan, since he returned to power in January. Mr Trump has "now ended conflicts between Thailand and Cambodia, Israel and Iran, Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, India and Pakistan, Serbia and Kosovo and Egypt and Ethiopia", she said at a White House press briefing. Ms Leavitt said the Republican leader has brokered, on average, about one peace deal or ceasefire per month during his six months in office. "It's well past time that President Trump was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize," she said. The US President has repeatedly claimed that he brokered the ceasefire between India and Pakistan, a charge denied by New Delhi. Tensions between India and Pakistan increased following a terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir's Pahalgam on April 22, in which 26 civilians were killed. India, after finding cross-border links to the attack, launched Operation Sindoor on May 7 and struck multiple terror camps in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK). Pakistan then launched a massive missile and drone attack, which was intercepted by the Indian armed forces. In retaliation, Indian forces struck airfields in Pakistan. A ceasefire on May 10 ended the hostilities. Trump To Win Nobel Peace Prize? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last month nominated Donald Trump, who is trying to broker a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, for the Nobel Peace Prize. In his letter to the Nobel Committee, which he shared online, Mr Netanyahu said Mr Trump had "demonstrated steadfast and exceptional dedication to promoting peace, security and stability around the world." Islamabad also said in June it would recommend Mr Trump for the prize for his work in helping to resolve a conflict between India and Pakistan. The Nobel Prizes are announced in October each year, but nominations close the previous January. If Mr Trump won the prize, he would become the fifth US president to do so after Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Jimmy Carter, and Barack Obama.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store