
Witkoff arrives in Gaza to address humanitarian crisis
The Gaza Health Ministry reported that at least 91 Palestinians were killed and more than 600 injured in the past 24 hours while attempting to obtain aid. Among them, 54 people died in northern Gaza near the Zikim crossing while waiting for food. Officials indicated that the numbers may rise, as many of the casualties were taken to hospitals that remain isolated and short of medical supplies.
According to the White House, Witkoff and U.S. Ambassador Mike Huckabee inspected food distribution efforts in Gaza.
Israel's military stated that Palestinians surrounded aid trucks and that its forces fired warning shots into the air, but denied causing injuries. An Israeli security official, speaking anonymously, said the gunfire that led to deaths came from within the crowd as people struggled over supplies.
Incidents linked to food distribution continue to occur across the territory. In Zawaida, a city in central Gaza, aid was delivered by airdrop because border crossings remain closed. Crowds rushed to collect the packages, leading to clashes and injuries.
Residents described their difficulties in accessing the limited aid. Eslam al-Telbany, displaced from Jabaliya, said she lost the food she had collected after being attacked in the crowd. Ahmed al-Khatib said his flour was stolen and that he broke a tooth during the incident. Another displaced woman, Rana Attia, said people preferred being notified by text message about collection points rather than chasing parcels dropped from aircraft.
Humanitarian organizations continue to state that current aid levels are far below requirements. They estimate that 500 to 600 trucks per day are needed to cover basic needs. Israeli authorities reported that 270 trucks of aid entered Gaza, while airdrops delivered 32 pallets.
Israel has recently announced measures intended to facilitate more international aid deliveries, under pressure from the global community. International agencies have warned that Gaza has been at risk of famine for years, and that the recent blockade has created conditions where famine is now taking place.
German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul also arrived in Israel for a two-day visit that includes meetings in the West Bank. Germany has traditionally been a close ally of Israel, but has recently pressed Israel to expand aid access and support a ceasefire. In a statement before his trip, Wadephul reiterated Germany's support for a two-state solution, saying that recognition of a Palestinian state should follow a process that "must begin now."
Witkoff also met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to discuss humanitarian issues and the possibility of a truce. It was their first meeting since Israel and the U.S. withdrew their teams from negotiations in Qatar last week. Witkoff previously said that Hamas had shown little interest in reaching an agreement.
President Trump commented on the situation through his Truth Social platform, writing that "the fastest way to end the Humanitarian Crisis in Gaza is for Hamas to SURRENDER AND RELEASE THE HOSTAGES!!!"
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Witkoff was sent to the region "to save lives and end this crisis," and described Trump as motivated by humanitarian concerns.
The conflict began on October 7, 2023, when Hamas carried out an attack in southern Israel, killing about 1,200 people and abducting 251 others. Approximately 50 hostages remain in captivity, with around 20 believed to be alive.
Israel's military response has resulted in more than 60,000 deaths in Gaza, according to the territory's Health Ministry. The ministry does not distinguish between civilians and combatants, but the United Nations and international aid groups treat its casualty figures as the most consistent available source.
The humanitarian situation remains critical, with food shortages, difficulties in aid distribution, and ongoing political disagreements complicating efforts to ease conditions in Gaza.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
2 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Trump pressures China and India to stop buying cheap Russian oil
U.S. President Donald Trump is pushing China and India to stop buying oil from Russia and helping fund the Kremlin's war against Ukraine. Trump is raising the issue as he seeks to press Russian President Vladimir Putin to agree to a ceasefire. But cheap Russian oil benefits refiners in those countries as well as meeting their needs for energy, and they're not showing any inclination to halt the practice. Three countries are big buyers of Russian oil China, India and Turkey are the biggest recipients of oil that used to go to the European Union. The EU's decision to boycott most Russian seaborne oil from January 2023 led to a massive shift in crude flows from Europe to Asia. Since then China has been the No. 1 overall purchaser of Russian energy since the EU boycott, with some $219.5 billion worth of Russian oil, gas and coal, followed by India with $133.4 billion and Turkey with $90.3 billion. Before the invasion, India imported relatively little Russian oil. Hungary imports some Russian oil through a pipeline. Hungary is an EU member, but President Viktor Orban has been critical of sanctions against Russia. The lure of cheaper oil One big reason: It's cheap. Since Russian oil trades at a lower price than international benchmark Brent, refineries can fatten their profit margins when they turn crude into usable products such as diesel fuel. Russia's oil earnings are substantial despite sanctions The Kyiv School of Economics says Russia took in $12.6 billion from oil sales in June. Russia continues to earn substantial sums even as the Group of Seven leading industrialized nations has tried to limit Russia's take by imposing an oil price cap. The cap is to be enforced by requiring shipping and insurance companies to refuse to handle oil shipments above the cap. Russia has to a great extent been able to evade the cap by shipping oil on a 'shadow fleet' of old vessels using insurers and trading companies located in countries that are not enforcing sanctions. Russian oil exporters are predicted to take in $153 billion this year, according to the Kyiv institute. Fossil fuels are the single largest source of budget revenue. The imports support Russia's ruble currency and help Russia to buy goods from other countries, including weapons and parts for them.


Canada News.Net
2 hours ago
- Canada News.Net
Musk's X Platform becomes megaphone for nationalist politicians
ROME, Italy: Across Europe, and sometimes even the world, a growing number of hard-right politicians, activists, and online influencers have discovered that getting the attention of Elon Musk is a powerful shortcut to amplifying their voices. Consider the case of a German politician whose party has been flagged as extremist by her country's own domestic intelligence service. For years, her reach was limited. However, on the days Musk liked or replied to her posts, her audience on X (formerly Twitter) leapt from a steady 230,000 to more than 2.2 million. Soon after, she guided her party to its strongest showing at the ballot box. In Britain, an anti-immigration activist who was once banned from Twitter and even jailed for contempt of court found new life after Musk reinstated him in late 2023. Since his return, he has mentioned or tagged Musk more than 120 times, earning nearly one million new followers. What once looked like the end of his career in public life has instead turned into a revival, thanks in no small part to the billionaire's willingness to grant him space on the platform. Even minor figures have benefited. A little-known influencer from Cyprus, who entered politics with little more than a fixation on Musk, suddenly emerged as a surprise member of the European Parliament. Before his win, his social-media goal seemed simple: to meet and embrace Musk. He not only got his hug but also a political boost. On days Musk engaged with his posts, his views skyrocketed from about 300,000 to nearly 10 million. Although Musk has soured in Washington politics—he resigned from President Donald Trump's advisory council this year and more recently has traded insults with Trump as he pursues his own political ambitions—his power on X has only grown. The platform he bought for US$44 billion has become his personal stage, giving him the ability to boost allies, undermine critics, and shape political conversations across borders. An Associated Press analysis of public data shows just how influential his digital megaphone has become in Europe. Reviewing more than 20,000 posts by 11 far-right figures in six countries, AP found that Musk's interactions often triggered surges in attention and followers for accounts aligned with nationalist, anti-immigration, or anti-progressive agendas. Musk himself has engaged with these accounts nearly 190 times since taking over Twitter, while European influencers have tagged or replied to him close to a thousand times. The results, European lawmakers warn, are troubling. "Every alarm bell needs to ring," said Christel Schaldemose, a vice president of the European Parliament who focuses on election integrity and digital regulation. She and others see Musk's behavior not simply as casual banter but as a form of political intervention—foreign interference of a kind Europe has long feared from Russia or China, now emanating from Silicon Valley. The numbers are striking. One influencer who had about 120,000 followers when Musk purchased Twitter in October 2022 grew to more than 1.2 million by early 2025. Seven other European accounts recorded six-figure jumps in the same period. While other forces, including national politics, certainly contributed, AP's findings suggest that Musk's attention can be the decisive spark that propels local actors onto the global stage. Musk himself frames his role differently. Declaring himself a "free speech absolutist," he has repeatedly argued that X should serve as an open forum for ideas, no matter how controversial. Yet critics point out that the platform is not neutral—it amplifies Musk's speech and those he chooses to elevate. Indeed, his own account has become the single most dominant presence on X. Since his acquisition, Musk's followers have more than doubled to more than 220 million, eclipsing every other account. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi saw a 25 percent jump over the same period, adding 21 million followers. Donald Trump's account grew by 12 million, or 14 percent. Pop star Taylor Swift managed just three million new followers, a three percent gain. None of them come close to Musk's relentless climb. The effect is a further concentration of digital power in the hands of one individual. Musk now commands the largest audience on a platform used by hundreds of millions worldwide, with the ability to direct attention at will. For governments, regulators, and voters, the question is no longer whether Musk matters in European politics. The question is how much—and whether democracies can adapt to a world where the world's richest man, through a single platform, can tilt debates, boost movements, and disrupt political balances that have held for decades.


Winnipeg Free Press
3 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
In rejecting the jobs report, Trump follows his own playbook of discrediting unfavorable data
WASHINGTON (AP) — When the coronavirus surged during President Donald Trump's first term, he called for a simple fix: Limit the amount of testing so the deadly outbreak looked less severe. When he lost the 2020 election, he had a ready-made reason: The vote count was fraudulent. And on Friday, when the July jobs report revisions showed a distressed economy, Trump had an answer: He fired the official in charge of the data and called the report of a sharp slowdown in hiring 'phony.' Trump has a go-to playbook if the numbers reveal uncomfortable realities, and that's to discredit or conceal the figures and to attack the messenger — all of which can hurt the president's efforts to convince the world that America is getting stronger. 'Our democratic system and the strength of our private economy depend on the honest flow of information about our economy, our government and our society,' said Douglas Elmendorf, a Harvard University professor who was formerly director of the Congressional Budget Office. 'The Trump administration is trying to suppress honest analysis.' The president's strategy carries significant risks for his own administration and a broader economy that depends on politics-free data. His denouncements threaten to lower trust in government and erode public accountability, and any manipulation of federal data could result in policy choices made on faulty numbers, causing larger problems for both the president and the country. The White House disputes any claims that Trump wants to hide numbers that undermine his preferred narratives. It emphasized that Goldman Sachs found that the two-month revisions on the jobs report were the largest since 1968, outside of a recession, and that should be a source of concern regarding the integrity of the data. Trump's aides say their fundamental focus is ensuring that any data gives an accurate view of reality. Not the first time Trump has sought to play with numbers Trump has a long history of dismissing data when it reflects poorly on him and extolling or even fabricating more favorable numbers, a pattern that includes his net worth, his family business, election results and government figures: — Judge Arthur Engoron ruled in a lawsuit brought by the state of New York that Trump and his company deceived banks, insurers and others by massively overvaluing his assets and exaggerating his net worth on paperwork used in making deals and securing loans. — Trump has claimed that the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections were each rigged. Trump won the 2016 presidential election by clinching the Electoral College, but he lost the popular vote to Hillary Clinton, a sore spot that led him to falsely claim that millions of immigrants living in the country illegally had cast ballots. He lost the 2020 election to Joe Biden but falsely claimed he had won it, despite multiple lawsuits failing to prove his case. — In 2019, as Hurricane Dorian neared the East Coast, Trump warned Alabama that the storm was coming its way. Forecasters pushed back, saying Alabama was not at risk. Trump later displayed a map in the Oval Office that had been altered with a black Sharpie — his signature pen — to include Alabama in the potential path of the storm. — Trump's administration has stopped posting reports on climate change, canceled studies on vaccine access and removed data on gender identity from government sites. — As pandemic deaths mounted, Trump suggested that there should be less testing. 'When you do testing to that extent, you're going to find more people,' Trump said at a June 2020 rally in Oklahoma. 'You're going to find more cases. So I said to my people, 'Slow the testing down, please.'' While Trump's actions have drawn outcry from economists, scientists and public interest groups, Elmendorf noted that Trump's actions regarding economic data could be tempered by Congress, which could put limits on Trump by whom he chooses to lead federal agencies, for example. 'Outside observers can only do so much,' Elmendorf said. 'The power to push back against the president rests with the Congress. They have not exercised that power, but they could.' White House says having its own people in place will make data 'more reliable' Kevin Hassett, director of the White House National Economic Council, took aim at the size of the downward revisions in the jobs report (a combined 258,000 reduction in May and June) to suggest that the report had credibility issues. He said Trump is focused on getting dependable numbers, despite the president linking the issue to politics by claiming the revisions were meant to make Republicans look bad. 'The president wants his own people there so that when we see the numbers, they're more transparent and more reliable,' Hassett said Sunday on NBC News. Jed Kolko, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who oversaw the Census Bureau and Bureau of Economic Analysis during the Biden administration, stressed that revisions to the jobs data are standard. That's because the numbers are published monthly, but not all surveys used are returned quickly enough to be in the initial publishing of the jobs report. 'Revisions solve the tension between timeliness and accuracy,' Kolko said. 'We want timely data because policymakers and businesses and investors need to make decisions with the best data that's available, but we also want accuracy.' Kolko stressed the importance in ensuring that federal statistics are trustworthy not just for government policymakers but for the companies trying to gauge the overall direction of the economy when making hiring and investment choices. 'Businesses are less likely to make investments if they can't trust data about how the economy is doing,' he said. Not every part of the jobs report was deemed suspect by the Trump administration. Before Trump ordered the firing of the Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner, Erika McEntarfer, the White House rapid response social media account reposted a statement by Vice President JD Vance noting that native-born citizens were getting jobs and immigrants were not, drawing from data in the household tables in the jobs report. Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer also trumpeted the findings on native-born citizens, noting on Fox Business Network's 'Varney & Co.' that they are accounting 'for all of the job growth, and that's key.' During his first run for the presidency, Trump criticized the economic data as being fake only to fully embrace the positive numbers shortly after he first entered the White House in 2017. White House says transparency is a value The challenge of reliable data goes beyond economic figures to basic information on climate change and scientific research. Monday Mornings The latest local business news and a lookahead to the coming week. In July, taxpayer-funded reports on the problems climate change is creating for America and its population disappeared from government websites. The White House initially said NASA would post the reports in compliance with a 1990 law, but the agency later said it would not because any legal obligations were already met by having reports submitted to Congress. The White House maintains that it has operated with complete openness, posting a picture of Trump on Monday on social media with the caption, 'The Most Transparent President in History.' In the picture, Trump had his back to the camera and was covered in shadows, visibly blocking out most of the light in front of him. ___ Associated Press writer Michelle Price in Washington contributed to this report.