US Considers Administering Gaza for 10 Years with Population Relocation Plan: Washington Post
The plan proposes a decade-long U.S. trusteeship over Gaza, offering $5,000 relocation packages and transforming the area into a tourism and high-tech hub, aiming to rebuild the war-torn enclave.
- The U.S. is considering administering Gaza for 10 years, which includes a relocation plan for its population, according to the Washington Post.
- The proposed plan, called the GREAT Trust, aims to create tourism and tech hubs in Gaza using private investment.
- The plan suggests that 25% of Gazans would choose to relocate, with 75% of them not returning.
- Critics note that the document does not address international law or local opposition to the mass relocation plan.
209 Articles
209 Articles
The Christian churches in Gaza, the Catholic and the Orthodox churches, are preaching with the example in opposition to the political-religious currents that support Trump and Netanyahu's plans to displace millions of people to create a "Middle East Riviera" (so, with the name of a real estate project). History has recorded regrettable events of many churches. In the case of the Christian, we can cite, for example, the trials of the Inquisition,…
Washington Post exposes Trump’s Gaza ‘GREAT Trust’ plan as displacement scheme
A 38-page plan circulating in the Trump administration outlines a U.S.-run trusteeship for postwar Gaza, proposing to transform the devastated enclave into a hub of luxury resorts and technology industries — while uprooting millions of Palestinians in the process.
One of the Trump administration’s current plans for the future of Gaza after the war would go through the evacuation of all Gazans to turn it into a tourist and manufacturing center, as The Washington Post has published. The prestigious U.S. media exclusively publishes a 38-page document detailing that Gaza would be controlled in trust by the U.S. (delivered by Israel) for at least 10 years and would require a temporary relocation of at least tw…
The Great project, which aims to rebuild and administer the Palestinian territory after the war, relies on voluntary and monetary departures. ...
Donald Trump’s expected plan for Gaza, outlined at a meeting in the White House a week ago with his son-in-law Jared Kushner, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and special envoy Steve Witkoff, foresees that the United States will assume the tutelage of the enclave for at least ten years under a trust fund. The project includes the movement of more than two million Palestinians to third countries or internal…
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- 34% of the sources lean Left, 34% of the sources are Center
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