
Netzarim corridor 'shouldn't have a future, should disappear'
9 Feb 2025
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Al Jazeera
12-07-2025
- Al Jazeera
Netanyahu & Trump: The optics and the outrage
The Listening Post As Netanyahu courts Trump with peace prizes and platitudes, divisions over Israel in the MAGA media space are deepening. Contributors: Laura Albast – Fellow, Institute for Palestine Studies Mitchell Plitnick – Author, Except for Palestine Mouin Rabbani – Co-editor, Jadaliyya Jude Russo – Managing editor, The American Conservative On our radar: Since the US-Israeli GHF took over the distribution of aid, more than 800 Palestinians have been killed while attempting to collect it. New reporting uncovers the foundation's links to plans for Gaza's ethnic cleansing. Meenakshi Ravi reports. Georgia under fire: The crackdown on protests and the press Mass protests, a tightening grip on media and a creeping authoritarianism; eight months on, the struggle over Georgia's democracy is intensifying. Elettra Scrivo reports from Tbilisi on the mounting crackdown on journalists and independent voices. Featuring: Irakli Rukhadze – Owner, Imedi TV Nestan Tsetkhladze – Editor, Netgazeti Nino Zautashvili – Former host, Real Space Video Duration 25 minutes 20 seconds 25:20 Video Duration 25 minutes 03 seconds 25:03 Video Duration 24 minutes 25 seconds 24:25 Video Duration 24 minutes 44 seconds 24:44 Video Duration 25 minutes 20 seconds 25:20 Video Duration 24 minutes 12 seconds 24:12 Video Duration 24 minutes 43 seconds 24:43


Qatar Tribune
08-07-2025
- Qatar Tribune
Gazans reject Trump's displacement plan despite death and destruction
Agencies Gaza Whenever Mansour Abu Al-Khaier stares across Gaza, all the 45-year-old Palestinian man sees is death, destruction and starvation after nearly two years of war between Hamas and Israel. But even though Palestinian lives have been shattered during the course of Israeli airstrikes and heavy bombardment, Al-Khaier and others flatly reject US President Donald Trump's Israeli-backed plan to displace Gaza's 2.3 million population. 'This is our land. Who would we leave it to, where would we go?' asked Al-Khair, a technician. Trump, hosting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House on Monday, indicated progress on a disputed initiative to relocate Palestinians out of the coastal enclave. Speaking to reporters at the start of a dinner between US and Israeli officials, Netanyahu said the United States and Israel were working with other countries who would give Palestinians a 'better future,' suggesting that Gazans would be able to move to neighbouring nations. In an exchange with Trump, Netanyahu said: 'You know if people want to stay, they can stay. But if they want to leave they should be able to leave. It shouldn't be a prison. It should be an open place and give people free choice.' Netanyahu himself said Israel was working with Washington to find other countries to agree to such a plan. Five days after becoming president in January, Trump said Jordan and Egypt should take in Palestinians from Gaza while suggesting he was open to this being a long-term plan. Cairo and Amman quickly rebuffed Trump's idea to turn impoverished Gaza into the 'Riviera of the Middle East', and so did Palestinians and human rights groups who said the plan would amount to ethnic cleansing. When asked this week about displacing Palestinians, Trump said the countries around Israel were helping out. 'We've had great cooperation from ... surrounding countries. ... So something good will happen,' Trump said. Saed, a 27-year-old Gaza Palestinian, woke up troubled to the news that Trump and Netanyahu, whose military has flattened much of Gaza, were again floating the displacement idea. Even after more than 20 months of war and repeated internal displacement, he remains deeply attached to Gaza, a tiny, densely-populated strip that is itself home to generations of refugees from the 1948 war that led to the creation of Israel. 'We have the right to leave of our own free will and visit other countries, but we reject the plan of displacement as Palestinians,' said Saed. Palestinians have long sought to create an independent state in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem through a US-mediated peace process. Many Palestinians accuse Israel of having methodically undermined their statehood prospects through increased settlement building in the West Bank and by levelling much of Gaza during the current war. Displacement is one of the most emotional issues for Palestinians, who fear a repetition of the 1948 'Nakba' (catastrophe) when hundreds of thousands were dispossessed of their homes in the war of Israel's birth. The Nakba has been one of the defining experiences for Palestinians for more than 75 years, helping to shape their national identity and casting its shadow on their conflicted relationship with Israel in the decades since. Some Palestinians who have faced relentless Israeli airstrikes and severe shortages of food, fuel, medicine and water are looking for a way out, according to findings by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research. 'Almost half want to leave the Gaza Strip if they could,' the think tank said in a report in May. A proposal seen by Reuters and bearing the name of a controversial US-backed aid group described a plan to build large-scale camps called 'Humanitarian Transit Areas' inside - and possibly outside - Gaza to house the Palestinian population. It outlined a vision of 'replacing Hamas control over the population in Gaza'. As far as Gaza Palestinian Abu Samir el-Fakaawi was concerned, 'I will not leave Gaza. This is my country.' He added: 'Our children who were martyred in the war are buried here. Our families. Our friends. Our cousins. We are all buried here. Whether Trump or Netanyahu or anyone else likes it or not, we are staying on this land.'


Al Jazeera
26-05-2025
- Al Jazeera
Why is Israel now facing pressure from some of its Western allies?
The Madrid Group has convened in Spain's capital for a fifth time, in a meeting attended by major European and Arab nations. Pressure on Israel this year has been ramped up, with Spain calling for an arms embargo on Israel and the imposition of sanctions on individuals who obstruct a two-state solution to resolve the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. The United Kingdom has paused trade talks and sanctioned a number of Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank. Canada and France have also threatened punitive measures. And the European Union – Israel's biggest trade partner – is reviewing its landmark Association Agreement covering trade and political dialogue. But after 20 months of Israel's destruction of Gaza, why is this happening now? And without changes on the ground for Palestinians, are these actions anything more than diplomatically symbolic? Presenter: Tom McRae Guests: Lynn Boylan – Member of European Parliament, and chair of the delegation of relations with Palestine Mouin Rabbani – Non-resident fellow at the Center for Conflict and Humanitarian Studies Saul Takahashi – Former deputy head of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights in occupied Palestine