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World Wide Jun 05, 2026

Hamas Refuses to Surrender Arms, Proposes Long-Term Truce in Gaza

Hamas has stated that it will not hand over its weapons, but proposes a long-term truce in Gaza whe…
The Stance of Hamas on Disarmament Hamas has announced that it will not surrender its arms, resisting ongoing disarmament demands. The group stated that the ultimate fate of its military arsenal will be decided following comprehensive discussions with other Palestinian factions. The Proposal for a Long-Term Hudna In an exclusive interview with Al Jazeera, Husam Badran, a member of the Hamas political bureau, introduced the concept of a long-term hudna (truce). He stated that when the Palestinian committee comes to take over the Gaza Strip, there will be no visible weapons in the streets and alleys of Gaza except the official weapons belonging to the Palestinian police. The Cairo Talks and Factional Consensus The upcoming Cairo meetings will gather eight key Palestinian factions to form a unified national stance. The talks aim to salvage the ceasefire originally proposed by United States President Donald Trump. However, Badran noted that Israel has failed to implement even 30 percent of its phase one obligations, making any transition to subsequent phases impossible. The Disarmament Deadlock While Palestinian factions demand the fulfilment of phase one survival metrics, Israeli officials and Nickolay Mladenov, the high representative for Gaza on Trump’s “Board of Peace”, are conditioning the transition to phase two on the disarmament of armed groups. Mladenov recently presented a 15-point “roadmap” built by the ceasefire guarantors. Negotiation Time and Israeli Expansion Palestinians view this 15-point framework as a stalling tactic designed to extract concessions while Israel deepens its occupation. Palestinian political analyst Wissam Afifa told Al Jazeera that Israel is exploiting “negotiation time” to exhaust the population through continuous escalation.
#Hamas #Gaza #Palestinian
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World Wide May 29, 2026

Israel's Netanyahu Orders Army to Seize 70% of Gaza Strip

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has instructed the army to expand its control of the Gaza…
The Directive Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has instructed the Israeli army to expand its control of the Gaza Strip to 70%, according to remarks aired by Israeli media. “At this point, we are fully in control of 60 percent of the territory of the Gaza Strip … and my directive is to get to … 70 percent,” Netanyahu said in footage recorded by Channel 12 and aired on Thursday. Current Control and Implications The Israeli army had in mid-March quietly sent maps to aid organisations showing it had already expanded its control to about 11 percent beyond the so-called “Yellow Line” demarcating areas of the enclave occupied by Israeli troops. That line was agreed in a United States-brokered “ceasefire” in October 2025. That meant it controlled 64 percent of the Palestinian territory, instead of 53 percent. Due to the Israeli army occupation, Palestinians cannot access about two-thirds of Gaza. A further seizure of the territory would force two million of them, already living in disastrous conditions, into an even smaller territory after enduring two years of genocidal war. Humanitarian Crisis Despite the nominal truce reached last year, Israeli bombing in Gaza continues with near-daily attacks. An Al Jazeera tally from October to April counted at least 2,400 Israeli violations. Earlier on Thursday, health authorities said an Israeli air raid killed at least 10 people, including four children, and wounded 20 others. According to the United Nations Office for Humanitarian Affairs’ (OCHA) latest report, the humanitarian situation for civilians in Gaza remains critical, with displaced families living in overcrowded tents, schools or damaged structures. Clean water is scarce, and poor waste collection is increasing health risks, including the spread of rats and insects. International Concerns Last week, the high representative overseeing the US-founded Board of Peace for Gaza, Nickolay Mladenov, warned that the deteriorating status quo in the enclave risks becoming “permanent”. Speaking to the UN Security Council, he urged the international body to use “every means at its disposal” to press Hamas to disarm and to push Israel to uphold its commitment under the October ceasefire, pointing to its continued killings and restrictions on humanitarian flow.
#Benjamin Netanyahu #Gaza Strip #Israel
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Politics May 27, 2026

Tony Blair's Critique of Labour Sparks Debate Amid Party Leadership Tensions

Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair has published a critical essay of the current Labour party lead…
The Lead: Blair's Intervention in Labour's FutureFormer UK Prime Minister Tony Blair has published a 5,700-word essay criticizing the current Labour party leadership under Keir Starmer, arguing they have failed to learn from his electoral successes and are stuck in outdated political debates. The intervention has sparked controversy as the party prepares for a crucial byelection in Makerfield that could shape its future direction.The Essay Content: Blair's Prescription for LabourBlair's essay, released through his eponymous thinktank, contains both praise and criticism for contemporary Labour politicians. He acknowledges that Starmer made his party an "acceptable default" at the 2024 election and describes Wes Streeting as a "huge political talent." However, the overall tone is critical, with Blair repeatedly reminding readers of his electoral success: "I led the Labour party for 13 years and through three general elections."The former prime minister argues that when Labour tries to puzzle out how to win a second term, the one thing ruled out is "learning from the only time in the party's 120-year history it has ever done so." He complains that the current leadership debate between Streeting and Andy Burnham "has an extraordinarily retro 20th-century feel to it."Blair's central thesis is that the UK, including the Labour party, is stuck in insular political debate and not addressing what he portrays as the century-defining challenge of AI. He criticizes specific policy decisions made by Starmer's government, suggesting they should have ditched new net zero projects, laws for workers' rights, a higher minimum wage, and changes to non-dom tax status. Instead, he argues, they should have "gone all out for making business feel respected and supported."The Political Impact: Mixed Reactions to Blair's CritiqueBlair's intervention has already provoked varied reactions within the Labour party. While some might agree with his assessment that the party needs a coherent strategy for economic growth, others view his advice as politically impossible or out of touch. The timing of the essay, before a byelection in Makerfield that could shape Labour's destiny for years, has been noted as potentially problematic.Some party members have dismissed Blair as becoming "less and less relevant," noting that he left frontline politics nearly 20 years ago and is now mainly seen at elite gatherings like the World Economic Forum in Davos or hobnobbing with Donald Trump as part of his Gaza Board of Peace. Others acknowledge that while Blair's specific policy prescriptions may be unrealistic, his broader concerns about the party's direction may have merit.The Historical Context: Blair's Pattern of InterventionThis essay is not Blair's first foray into criticizing his former party. The Tony Blair Institute for Global Change bills it as "his first major political intervention since Labour came to power," but this ignores his previous comments on issues including immigration and net zero. This pattern of intervention has led some to question whether Blair's advice is genuinely helpful or simply designed to inflict maximum annoyance on his party.Blair's essay reinforces the perception that he has spent more time meeting US presidents than British voters in recent years. His suggestion that the UK government should have backed Trump in his attacks on Iran, and his view that the US president is simply seeking a stronger Nato rather than undermining the alliance, reinforce this perception.The Future Outlook: Can Labour Learn from Blair?For some in the current government, criticism from Labour's most electorally successful leader will sting, even if they regard his call for a move to the "radical centre" as somewhere between vague and meaningless. Blair writes that "governments which succeed don't start with a personality contest, or a political question, as in: how do we 'save the country' from Reform? They start with an idea, a project, a governing purpose, an analysis of what is wrong and a plan to put it right."While Blair certainly has plans, unlike when he had a generally sure touch as a working politician, these ones feel unlikely to be taken up by the current Labour leadership. The challenge for Starmer and his team will be to address the valid concerns about economic strategy while avoiding the political pitfalls of adopting Blair's specific prescriptions.
#Tony Blair #Labour Party #Keir Starmer
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Politics May 25, 2026

Netanyahu Stalls Gaza Ceasefire Ahead of September Elections

Israel has intensified military operations in Gaza despite a ceasefire brokered seven months ago, w…
Escalation of Gaza Operations Amid a Fragile CeasefireSeven months after a ceasefire was brokered, Israeli forces have resumed large‑scale attacks in Gaza, turning the truce into a cover for continued warfare. The latest wave of violence has killed at least 880 Palestinians, raising the overall war death toll to 72,797 according to Gaza’s health ministry.Casualty Toll and Humanitarian Metrics880 Palestinians killed since the ceasefire beganTotal war deaths now at 72,797 (Gaza Health Ministry)Nearly 90% of Gaza’s buildings reported destroyedRestrictions on food and medicine intensifying a humanitarian disasterSystematic Demolition and Forced DisplacementThe Gaza Rights Center documented at least 12 cases in May where Israeli forces issued phone warnings before razing residential blocks in Nuseirat, Bureij and Maghazi, as well as extensive demolition east of Deir el‑Balah. Rights monitors argue these actions lack legitimate military purpose and aim to render the remaining territory uninhabitable for the 2.3 million residents.Political Calculus Behind the Stalled CeasefirePrime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces a national election slated for September. Analysts and human‑rights officials contend he is using the ceasefire stalemate to placate right‑wing coalition partners and voters, deliberately delaying disarmament commitments and humanitarian aid. The strategy is seen as a bid to preserve political capital amid criticism over Israel’s handling of the Gaza war, the Hezbollah front in Lebanon, and broader regional tensions.Outlook Ahead of September ElectionsWith the election horizon approaching, experts warn that Israel may intensify pressure on Gaza to bolster domestic support, risking further civilian casualties and international condemnation. The weakening of the U.S.–led Board of Peace and a diplomatic vacuum—exacerbated by competing regional priorities—could limit external constraints on Israel’s military options, prolonging the humanitarian crisis until a political resolution emerges.
#Israel #Gaza #Benjamin Netanyahu
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Politics May 22, 2026

Russia's Nuclear Deployment to Belarus: Strategic Posturing or Escalation Risk?

Russia has deployed tactical nuclear weapons to Belarus and conducted large-scale joint military ex…
The Nuclear Buildup in Eastern Europe Earlier this week, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko for the first time took part in the "rehearsal" of Russia's use of tactical and strategic nuclear weapons. Between Tuesday and Thursday, he and Russian President Vladimir Putin presided over joint military drills covering the area from Eastern Europe to the Pacific, involving hundreds of Russian missile launchers, warplanes, warships and nuclear submarines. "We threaten absolutely no one," said Lukashenko, who has helmed Belarus since 1994. "But we have such weapons, and we're ready in every possible way to defend our common fatherland from [the western Belarusian city of] Brest to [Russia's Pacific port of] Vladivostok." Russia's Nuclear Drills and Capabilities "It's important to further boost the level of readiness of strategic and tactical nuclear forces," Putin stated during the exercises. Both leaders ordered the launch of the intercontinental, hypersonic Yars missile capable of carrying three independently targetable nuclear missiles, which flew 5,750km (3,573 miles) from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in northwestern Russia to the Pacific Kamchatka Peninsula in less than 20 minutes. As part of the drills, Moscow supplied Minsk with modified Su-25 fighter jets and Iskander-M ballistic missiles with a range of up to 500km (310 miles). Nuclear weapons are reportedly stored at the Asipovichi military range, less than 200km (124 miles) north of the Ukrainian border. Geopolitical Implications The drills come amid heightened tensions between Russia and NATO. NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte warned that if Moscow uses nuclear weapons against Ukraine, the alliance's response would be "devastating." The exercises are clearly timed to a summit of NATO foreign ministers in Sweden's Helsingborg, a venue symbolic as Sweden joined the alliance after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. "The events develop suddenly, seemingly without any external reasons," noted Nikolay Mitrokhin, a researcher with Germany's Bremen University. "Something big is taking place, something that will be significant for international politics in general, and for mass media, including the very supply of nuclear arms." Belarus's Calculus While Belarus enjoys economic preferences and cheap hydrocarbons from Russia, Lukashenko has resisted Putin's attempts to merge Belarus with Russia as part of "union state" deals dating back to the 1990s. In recent months, ties between Belarus and the United States have also warmed, with Lukashenko joining United States President Donald Trump's Board of Peace. "We're not going to get sucked into the war in Ukraine. There's no need for it, neither civil nor military," Lukashenko stated, signaling his readiness to meet with Ukrainian President Zelenskyy. "If [Zelenskyy] wants to discuss something, seek advice, or anything else, he's welcome. I'm ready to meet him anywhere in Ukraine or Belarus." Future Scenarios Ukrainian President Zelenskyy has warned that the drills may be part of Moscow's preparations to launch a new offensive against northern Ukraine and Kyiv after Russian troops failed to capture sizeable areas in eastern and southern Ukraine this year. However, the current concentration of Russian forces in Belarus is "insufficient" for a new offensive, according to the head of the Kyiv-based Penta think tank. "Attacking Ukraine with Belarusian forces alone may end very badly for Lukashenko," said Volodymyr Fesenko. "For him, involving Belarus in the war is too big a risk." Despite this, analysts acknowledge that "unfortunately, there is such a risk" of Belarus becoming more directly involved in the conflict, though most believe Lukashenko will avoid such a development.
#Russia #Belarus #Nuclear Weapons
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Politics May 22, 2026

UN Peace Envoy Warns of Permanent Gaza Divide Under Current Status Quo

UN Peace Envoy Nickolay Mladenov warns that the deteriorating status quo in Gaza risks becoming per…
The Diplomatic Warning The high representative overseeing the United States-founded Board of Peace for Gaza, Nickolay Mladenov, has warned that the deteriorating status quo in the devastated Palestinian enclave risks becoming "permanent." Speaking to the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), Mladenov presented a roadmap detailing obligations for Israel and Hamas to implement a permanent ceasefire. "Let me say this clearly: the implementation cannot advance through Palestinian obligations alone," Mladenov said, speaking via video call. "The continued killings and Israeli restrictions affecting humanitarian flows are not abstract issues." He urged the UNSC to use "every means at its disposal" to press Hamas to disarm, while also saying that Israel must uphold its commitment under a ceasefire agreed in October. The Humanitarian Crisis The war that Israel launched following the October 7, 2023 attacks on southern Israel by Hamas and other armed Palestinian groups was halted by a ceasefire in October 2025. More than 72,775 Palestinians have been killed in the conflict. But the Israeli military maintains a strict security regime, and many hundreds more have been killed in the past seven months. Conflict monitors warn that since the ceasefire in the US-Israel war on Iran was struck last month, Israeli bombardment of Gaza has accelerated. Violent raids by settlers and the military in the occupied West Bank have also been increasing. On Thursday, an Israeli drone attack killed a 26-year-old in Gaza's al-Mahatta area, east of Deir el-Balah city, according to Wafa news agency. The Stalled Peace Process In January, the US announced that the Gaza "ceasefire" was moving to phase two, which is supposed to focus on Hamas's disarmament, long-term governance and the establishment of a panel of Palestinian technocrats to lead post-war Gaza. It also calls for the gradual retreat of the Israeli army, which still controls more than 50 percent of the Palestinian territory, and the deployment of an international stabilizing force. But with the war in Iran drawing the world's attention amid a global energy crisis, the transition to the second phase has been stalled for weeks. Mladenov, a veteran Bulgarian diplomat, warned of the risks of inaction by both parties. The Regional Implications "The risk is that the deteriorating status quo becomes permanent: a divided Gaza, Hamas holding military and administrative control over two million people across less than half the territory," Mladenov said. "Those people are likely to remain trapped in the rubble, dependent on aid with no meaningful reconstruction, because reconstruction financing will not follow where weapons have not been laid down." "And the result? Another generation growing up in tents in fear, with despair as the most rational thing for them to feel." This, he said, is a scenario that Israelis, Palestinians and the region "should all fear and mobilize to avoid."
#Nickolay Mladenov #Gaza #UNSC
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Politics May 20, 2026

Trump's Gaza Board of Peace Faces Funding Shortfall Amid Controversy

The US-led Board of Peace, founded by Donald Trump to oversee Gaza's reconstruction, faces a critic…
The Funding Crisis The Board of Peace, which was founded by United States President Donald Trump in January to oversee the administration and reconstruction of the Gaza Strip, is facing a crippling cash crunch that threatens to derail its ambitious $70bn reconstruction plan for the devastated enclave. The US-led board recently reported a critical gap between its financial commitments and actual disbursements, warning of an urgent liquidity crisis, according to the Reuters news agency. The Structure of the Board However, experts tracking international aid to Palestinians said the funding shortfall is neither surprising nor purely administrative. Instead, they argued that the reluctance of Arab and European donors stems from the board’s controversial structure, a lack of a viable political horizon for a Palestinian state and Israel’s ongoing military expansion across the besieged enclave. Moath al-Amoudi, an expert in international aid to Palestinians, told Al Jazeera that the heavily publicised pledges are closer to a “talk show” than a genuine humanitarian effort. A History of Empty Promises “Out of the $17bn pledged, the actual liquidity that has reached the ground is zero,” al-Amoudi said. “Donors are terrified of engaging with a board that carries no political vision and treats Gaza merely as an American security protectorate.” The gap between pledges and actual disbursements is a historical constant in the Palestinian context, but the US has a particularly poor track record, al-Amoudi noted. Commercial Guardianship and the $1bn Seats Much of the international hesitation is rooted in the architecture of the Board of Peace itself. Previous Al Jazeera reporting revealed that the board operates as a complex three-tiered governing structure heavily stacked with American billionaires and pro-Israel figures, such as billionaire Marc Rowan, US envoy Steve Witkoff, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner. Humanitarian Aid as Political Blackmail The board’s funding crisis is deeply intertwined with its strict political and security conditions. The three-phased US plan for Gaza explicitly demands the full disarmament of Hamas and all allied Palestinian factions as a prerequisite for reconstruction funds and the opening of border crossings while Israel has continued to violate the terms of an October “ceasefire”. The Yellow Line and Modern Ghettos Beyond the political and structural flaws of the board, the volatile reality on the ground makes meaningful reconstruction nearly impossible. Despite a nominal “ceasefire”, Israeli forces have continued their near-daily violations. According to local medical sources, 828 Palestinians have been killed since the “truce” went into effect.
#Donald Trump #Gaza Strip #Board of Peace
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World Wide May 20, 2026

Trump's Gaza Reconstruction Plan Stalls as Funding Shortfalls Hamper Progress

More than seven months after Trump brokered a Gaza ceasefire deal, reconstruction efforts remain st…
Gaza's Reconstruction Stalled Despite PromisesGaza remains in a grim limbo more than seven months after Donald Trump brokered a ceasefire deal, with no reconstruction underway, the Board of Peace struggling with funding, and Palestinian technocrats chosen to run the strip sidelined in Egypt. The ambitious vision for Gaza's future has been hampered by political obstacles and financial shortfalls, leaving millions of Palestinians in dire conditions.The Board of Peace Faces Implementation ChallengesThe Board of Peace, established to oversee Gaza's reconstruction, has identified Hamas's refusal to hand over weapons and cede control of the strip as the "principal obstacle" to Trump's plan. However, several people familiar with the body indicate that funding shortfalls could jeopardize the entire effort. Palestinian technocrats selected to administer Gaza have been effectively sidelined, with decisions being made in Egypt rather than locally.Severe Funding Shortfalls Undermine Reconstruction EffortsNine countries pledged $7 billion (£5 billion) to a "Gaza relief" package at the inaugural meeting of the Board of Peace, chaired by Trump. However, only the United Arab Emirates and Morocco have sent funds, with the group receiving just $23 million to fund its operations, plus an additional $100 million for a future Palestinian police force. This amounts to only $1.75 for every $100 pledged. The UN has estimated the total cost of rebuilding Gaza to be upward of $70 billion over decades, highlighting the massive gap between promises and reality.International Reluctance and Geopolitical ComplicationsSeveral countries that initially committed to funding the Board of Peace are now reluctant to fulfill their pledges after months of stalled diplomacy and no visible progress on the ground. The Iran conflict has provided convenient cover for payment delays, according to sources familiar with the organization. "Countries are hesitant to pay their portions," stated one diplomat involved in international Gaza negotiations. The geopolitical complexities have created a situation where "nobody with money and resources wants to work with the Board of Peace," as one anonymous source put it.Humanitarian Crisis Deepens as Promises Remain UnfulfilledThe stalled reconstruction efforts have exacerbated the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, with displaced Palestinians living in makeshift tents after their homes were destroyed in Israeli attacks. Images of destruction and temporary shelters underscore the urgent need for reconstruction that has not materialized. Nickolay Mladenov, the Bulgarian diplomat serving as "high representative" for Gaza, acknowledged last week that Palestinians in Gaza had been let down by the international community. "The door to the future of Gaza is still closed. It is not what the Palestinians were promised, and it is not what they deserve," Mladenov stated, adding that the impasse also jeopardizes Israel's long-term security.Uncertain Path Forward for Gaza's ReconstructionWith funding shortfalls, political obstacles, and competing international priorities, the path forward for Gaza's reconstruction remains uncertain. The Board of Peace continues to exist on paper but lacks the resources and political will to implement its ambitious plans. Unless significant changes occur in the international commitment to Gaza's reconstruction, the territory faces a prolonged period of instability and suffering, with millions of Palestinians continuing to live in conditions far below what was promised under the original ceasefire agreement.
#Donald Trump #Gaza #Board of Peace
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Politics May 20, 2026

Trump's Gaza Reconstruction Board Faces Critical Funding Shortfall

Trump's Board of Peace overseeing Gaza reconstruction faces a significant funding gap between disbu…
The LeadA body set up by United States President Donald Trump to oversee the administration and reconstruction of the Gaza Strip has revealed a significant funding shortfall that threatens its ability to deliver on reconstruction efforts.The Board of Peace Funding CrisisTrump's so-called "Board of Peace" has warned of a substantial gap between the funds disbursed and the $17 billion pledged to the organization, according to media reports. The board, which was approved by the UN as part of a peace plan between Israel and Hamas, has faced skepticism from critics who view it as a means of sidestepping traditional international organizations and aid groups."Funds committed but not yet disbursed represent the difference between a framework that exists on paper and one that delivers on the ground for the people of Gaza," a May 15 report to the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) states.The Financial Reality of Gaza ReconstructionThe cost of reconstructing Gaza has been estimated at $70 billion, with the board reporting that 85 percent of Gaza's buildings and infrastructure have been destroyed and 70 million tonnes of rubble need to be cleared. Despite these staggering figures, Reuters reported in April that the board had received only a small portion of the pledged $17 billion, a claim the body initially rejected by stating there were "no funding constraints."The May 15 report before the UNSC emphasized that funding gaps must be closed "with urgency," though it did not specify the exact size of the shortfall.International Skepticism and Geopolitical ImplicationsThe funding shortfalls have reinforced concerns about the Board of Peace, which has already been viewed with skepticism by many countries. Several nations, including the United States, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Morocco, Uzbekistan, and Kuwait have pledged funds, but many countries have declined to participate in the body.Israel has continued to restrict humanitarian access to Gaza and carry out frequent strikes that have killed more than 800 Palestinians since the ceasefire went into effect in October. The board has placed blame on Hamas for the shortcomings of the ceasefire, stating that the group has refused to relinquish control in the Gaza Strip. Hamas has responded by slamming what it calls "fallacies" in the report.Future Outlook for Gaza ReconstructionThe Board of Peace's ability to address the funding gap will be critical to the future of Gaza reconstruction. With the United States frequently shielding Israel from criticism and avoiding blame for negotiation setbacks, the board faces significant challenges in implementing its reconstruction plans. The international community will be watching closely to see whether the pledged funds materialize and whether the board can overcome the political obstacles to deliver on its promises for the people of Gaza.
#Donald Trump #Gaza #Board of Peace
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