Melania Trump returns to Washington after four-week absence.

Image
After a four-week absence from Washington, first lady Melania Trump returned to the White House on Saturday for an annual dinner and reception with the nation’s governors. “She worked very hard on making sure that everything was beautiful. And she’s very good at that,” President Donald Trump said in brief remarks to governors in the candlelit East Room, his wife seated nearby at a table filled with overflowing vases of white hydrangeas and tulips. While Melania Trump may be preparing the White House for visitors — she announced in a statement last week that tours of the historic home are reopening to the public — the first lady apparently has had less interest in spending time there.  Since her husband took the oath of office on January 20, she has not spent significant time at the White House, according to sources with direct knowledge of her schedule. Melania Trump was an active presence during the first days of the president’s second term, but after joining her husband for...

Trump says US will ‘take over’ Gaza as he welcomes Netanyahu

 


President Donald Trump made an extraordinary proposal for the United States to “take over” the Gaza Strip, as he hosted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for crucial talks on the truce with Hamas.



Trump also doubled down on his call for Palestinians to move out of the war-battered territory to Middle Eastern countries like Egypt and Jordan, despite the Palestinians and both nations flatly rejecting his suggestion.



“The US will take over the Gaza Strip and we will do a job with it, too. We’ll own it,” Trump told a joint press conference with Netanyahu.


Trump said the United States would get rid of unexploded bombs, “level the site” and remove destroyed buildings, and “create an economic development that will supply unlimited numbers of jobs and housing for the people of the area.”


But Trump appeared to suggest that it was not Palestinians who would return there.

“It should not go through a process of rebuilding and occupation by the same people that have really stood there and fought for it and lived there and died there and lived a miserable existence there,” he said.

He said Gaza’s two million inhabitants should instead “go to other countries of interest with humanitarian hearts.”


Netanyahu hailed Trump’s “great force and powerful leadership” in sealing the original ceasefire deal, and took a swipe at former president Joe Biden, with whom he had tense relations over the death toll in Gaza


 

Netanyahu hailed Trump as the “greatest friend Israel has ever had.”

He said the US president’s Gaza plan could “change history” and was worth “paying attention to.”


‘Great force’


Egypt and Jordan have flatly rejected Trump’s suggestion of moving Palestinians from Gaza.

The Palestinian envoy to the United Nations meanwhile said world leaders should “respect” the wishes of Palestinians.



Gazans have also denounced Trump’s idea. “Trump thinks Gaza is a pile of garbage -- absolutely not,” said 34-year-old Hatem Azzam, a resident of the southern city of Rafah.

The US president has claimed credit for securing the first six-week phase of the Israel-Hamas truce after more than 15 months of fighting and bombing, and he was expected to urge Netanyahu to move to the next phase aimed at a more lasting peace.


Netanyahu earlier said “we’re going to try” when asked how optimistic he was about moving on to phase two.


He hailed Trump’s “great force and powerful leadership” in sealing the original ceasefire deal, and took a swipe at former president Joe Biden, with whom he had tense relations over the death toll in Gaza.


“When the other side sees daylight between us -- and occasionally in the last few years they saw daylight -- it’s more difficult. When we cooperate, chances are good,” Netanyahu said.

Israel said hours ahead of the White House talks it was sending a team to mediator Qatar to discuss the second phase of the agreement.



Hamas said Tuesday negotiations for the second phase had begun, with spokesman Abdel Latif al-Qanou saying the focus was on “shelter, relief and reconstruction”.

Israel’s retaliatory response has killed at least 47,518 people in Gaza, the majority civilians, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry. The UN considers these figures as reliable

Under the first phase of the ceasefire, Palestinian militants and Israel have begun exchanging hostages.



Eighteen hostages have been freed so far in exchange for some 600 mostly Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails.


The war began when Hamas attacked Israel on 7 October 2023, taking into Gaza 251 hostages, 76 of whom are still held in the Palestinian territory including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.

Families of the Israeli hostages have been urging all sides to ensure the agreement is maintained so their loved ones can be freed.


Since the Gaza ceasefire took effect on 19 January, Israel has launched a deadly operation against militants in the occupied West Bank’s north.


UN aid agency UNRWA -- which is now banned in Israel -- warned that the heavily impacted refugee camp of Jenin was “going into a catastrophic direction”.

On Tuesday, the Israeli army said a gunman killed two soldiers before being shot dead in an attack south of Jenin.

The truce has also led to a surge of food, fuel, medical and other aid into Gaza, and allowed people displaced by the war to return to the north of the Palestinian territory.

Hamas’s 7 October attack resulted in the deaths of 1,210 people on Israeli side, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.


Israel’s retaliatory response has killed at least 47,518 people in Gaza, the majority civilians, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry. The UN considers these figures as reliable.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

American fighters are dying in Ukraine in growing numbers. Bringing their bodies home is a complex task

Wrongfully detained American teacher Marc Fogel meets with Trump after being released from Russia in an ‘exchange’.

OpenAI says Chinese rivals using its work for their AI apps