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Trump's defence chief lays down demands on Ukraine, NATO

By - Feb 12,2025 - Last updated at Feb 12,2025

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth (L) shakes hands with British Defence Secretary John Healey, on the eve of a NATO defence ministers' meeting at the alliance's headquarters in Brussels, on Wednesday (AFP photo)

BRUSSELS — Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth laid out President Donald Trump's red lines and demands on Ukraine and NATO to Washington's allies on Wednesday, telling Europe it must step up on supporting Kyiv and its own defence.


In a forceful introduction at NATO headquarters, the former television anchor set out the contours for a future deal that Trump has vowed to reach on ending Russia's war on Ukraine.

"Our message is clear, the bloodshed must stop and this war must end," he told a group of Kyiv's backers that included his Ukrainian counterpart.

Hegseth said trying to return Ukraine to its pre-2014 borders was an "illusionary goal" that would extend the fighting.

The US defence chief said security guarantees would be needed for Ukraine but that NATO membership was "not realistic," and made clear the United States would not deploy troops on the ground.

"Instead, any security guarantee must be backed by capable European and non-European troops," he said.

Hegseth said that Trump was "unleashing US energy production" and urging other producers to do so in a bid to drive down prices -- and push Moscow to negotiate.

But he insisted that Europe must now start providing the "overwhelming share" of aid to Ukraine.

The tough US stance had largely been expected but it will still provide a cold shower for Kyiv as its forces struggle to hold back Russia.

Hegseth's visit to NATO headquarters is part of the first flurry of high-ranking American visits to Europe since Trump took power.

Those are set to culminate with Vice President JD Vance meeting Ukraine's leader Volodymyr Zelensky in Munich on Friday.

'Imbalanced relationship'

On European security, Hegseth echoed Trump's demands for NATO to more than double its defence spending target to five percent of GDP.

While he said Washington remained committed to NATO, the United States will "no longer tolerate an imbalanced relationship" that sees Europe underpaying.

He warned that US prime interests were focused on the threat from China and that there may be "trade offs" on American involvement in Europe.

"As the United States prioritises its attention to these threats, European allies must lead from the front," he said.

US allies have already stepped up their spending in the face of Russia's invasion of Ukraine and are pledging to do more to back Kyiv.

"Secretary Hegseth, we hear you," said Britain's defence minister John Healey in a brief response.

"We hear your concerns on stepping up for Ukraine, we are and we will. On stepping up for European security. We are and we will."

Britain announced a fresh package of aid for Ukraine worth $185 million.

 'Do a lot more'

NATO's European members are terrified about Ukraine being forced into a bad deal that lets Moscow claim victory and leave them facing the threat of an emboldened Russia.

The United States has underpinned European security through NATO over the past seven decades.

Hegseth's broadside is set to fire a starting pistol on negotiations for setting a new spending target for alliance members at a June summit in the Netherlands.

NATO chief Mark Rutte said he expects the goal to be raised to "north of three percent".

"We need to do a lot more so we have what we need to deter and defend. And so that there is more equitable burden sharing," he said.

124 journalists killed, most by Israel, in deadliest year for reporters – CPJ

82 Palestinian journalists killed by Israel in Gaza

By - Feb 12,2025 - Last updated at Feb 12,2025

A relative bids farewell during the funeral of Palestine TV journalist Mohamed Abu Hatab and 11 family members, the day after they were killed in an Israeli bombardment of Khan Yunis in November 2023 (AFP photo)

NEW YORK — Last year was the deadliest for journalists in recent history, with at least 124 reporters killed -- and Israel responsible for nearly 70 per cent of that total, the Committee to Protect Journalists reported Wednesday.


The uptick in killings, which marks a 22 percent increase over 2023, reflects "surging levels of international conflict, political unrest and criminality worldwide," the CPJ said.

It was the deadliest year for reporters and media workers since CPJ began keeping records more than three decades ago, with journalists murdered across 18 different countries, it said.

A total of 85 journalists died in the Israeli war on Gaza, "all at the hands of the Israeli military," the CPJ said, adding that 82 of them were Palestinians.

Sudan and Pakistan recorded the second highest number of journalists and media workers killed, with six each.

In Mexico, which has a reputation as one of the most dangerous countries for reporters, five were killed, with CPJ reporting it had found "persistent flaws" in Mexico's mechanisms for protecting journalists.

And in Haiti, where two reporters were murdered, widespread violence and political instability have sown so much chaos that "gangs now openly claim responsibility for journalist killings," the report said.

Other deaths took place in countries such as Myanmar, Mozambique, India and Iraq.

"Today is the most dangerous time to be a journalist in CPJ's history," said the group's CEO Jodie Ginsberg.

"The war in Gaza is unprecedented in its impact on journalists and demonstrates a major deterioration in global norms on protecting journalists," she said.

CPJ, which has kept records on journalist killings since 1992, said that 24 of the reporters were deliberately killed because of their work in 2024.

Freelancers, the report said, were among the most vulnerable because of their lack of resources, and accounted for 43 of the killings in 2024.

The year 2025 is not looking more promising, with six journalists already killed in the first weeks of the year, CPJ said.

Ecuador’s president claims ‘irregularities’ in first-round vote

By - Feb 12,2025 - Last updated at Feb 12,2025

QUITO — Ecuador’s President Daniel Noboa claimed Tuesday there had been “irregularities” in a first-round election in which he took a razor-thin lead, triggering a run-off.

The official outcome of Sunday’s vote gave Noboa 44.15 per cent of the votes cast, followed by 43.95 per cent for leftist challenger Luisa Gonzalez — an outcome closer than predicted by opinion polls.

“There were many irregularities,” Noboa, 37, told a domestic radio station on Tuesday, insisting his campaign team’s tally gave him a “higher figure” and that work to check the official count was continuing.

European Union election observers on the ground, however, said they had seen no evidence of fraud, and the Organisation of American States (OAS) said its own initial count was in line with that of Ecuador’s electoral council.

With 50 per cent of votes required for a first-round victory, a runoff is set for April 13.

Noboa, heir to a billion-dollar banana export business, campaigned on his crackdown on drug cartel violence blamed for a surge in murder, kidnapping and extortion in Ecuador in recent years.

In 2023, the once-peaceful country recorded a record 47 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants, and after Noboa’s first 14 months in office, the figure dropped to 38 per 100,000, according to official data.

Gonzalez, a 47-year-old lawyer, has called for greater respect for human rights in the war on the cartels, and said Sunday’s result showed “that people want change”.

The next president will also contend with massive state debt, worsened by the costly war on gangs, and a poverty rate of 28 per cent.

‘People were threatened’

Noboa was elected in 2023 to complete the four-year term of predecessor Guillermo Lasso, who had called a snap vote to avoid impeachment for alleged embezzlement.

One of the world’s youngest leaders, Noboa insisted on Tuesday there were “dozens and dozens of cases in which people were threatened in order to vote for the Citizen Revolution” party of rival Gonzalez, who had also signalled voting “anomalies”.

But Gabriel Mato, head of an EU observer mission in Ecuador, told reporters in Quito: “We do not have a single objective element to indicate that there had been any type of fraud.”

And an OAS statement said it had “not identified or received any evidence of irregularities”.

Gonzalez, in a post on X, urged Noboa to show “respect” and insisted her voters were “neither narcos nor criminals”.

Noboa and Gonzalez had already dueled for the top job just 15 months ago, and the 2025 rematch is widely seen as a referendum on the president’s hardline approach to law enforcement.

Since taking office, Noboa has declared a state of emergency, deployed the army to the streets and prisons, and amassed extraordinary executive powers to curb cartel violence.

Human rights groups say the aggressive use of the armed forces has led to abuses, including the murder of four boys whose charred bodies were recently found near an army base.

Both Noboa and Gonzalez were shadowed on the campaign trail by a phalanx of special forces, hoping to avoid a repeat of the 2023 election when a leading candidate was assassinated.

Sunday’s vote passed off peacefully.

Ecuador is home to an estimated 20 criminal gangs employed in trafficking, kidnapping and extortion, sowing terror in a country of 17 million that is squeezed between the world’s biggest cocaine producers, Peru and Colombia.

In recent years, the South American nation has been plunged into violence by the rapid spread of transnational cartels that use its ports to ship drugs to the United States and Europe.

Gonzalez is the protege of socialist ex-president Rafael Correa, who is living in exile and was sentenced in absentia by an Ecuadoran court to eight years in prison for corruption.

If she wins in April, Gonzalez would be Ecuador’s first elected woman president.

Trump blasts judges, fuelling fear of constitutional clash

By - Feb 12,2025 - Last updated at Feb 12,2025

People hold signs as they gather for a ‘Save the Civil Service’ rally hosted by the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) outside the US Capitol on Tuesday in Washington, DC (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON — US President Donald Trump slammed “highly political judges” on Tuesday as his new administration veered closer to a constitutional clash with the courts over his plans to radically overhaul the government and amass power in the White House.

With the Republican Party controlling Congress and completely loyal to Trump, the billionaire president has largely ignored the legislature as he carries out his unprecedented policies.

But he has faced growing pushback from the courts since taking office three weeks ago, with US media outlets reporting 11 orders issued against the administration — five of them on Monday alone — from dozens of federal lawsuits.

As the courts and Trump appeared increasingly to be on a collision course, he lashed out on Truth Social.

“Billions of Dollars of FRAUD, WASTE, AND ABUSE, has already been found in the investigation of our incompetently run government. Now certain activists and highly political judges want us to slow down, or stop,” Trump posted.

“Losing this momentum will be very detrimental to finding the TRUTH, which is turning out to be a disaster for those involved in running our government. Much left to find. No Excuses!!!”

Trump first ran up against the judiciary over an attempt to freeze $3 trillion in federal grants and loans, a deferred resignation program for government workers, and a plan to transfer transgender inmates to men’s prisons.

He has also clashed with judges over his abolition of birthright citizenship for children born to undocumented immigrants, sending Venezuelan migrants to Guantanamo Bay, funding cuts to the National Institutes of Health, the firing of the government’s ethics watchdog and placing workers from the US Agency for International Development on leave.

Injunctions have been placed on each of these actions. But concerns are mounting that Trump could ultimately defy the rulings, prompting a full-blown constitutional crisis.

‘Coup’?

Trump’s harshest critics say that horse has already bolted after a federal judge was forced to upbraid the White House on Monday for failing to comply with his order to end the federal funding freeze.

Vice President JD Vance has fueled speculation over a coming clash, claiming in a social media post Sunday that judges lack authority to “control the executive’s legitimate power.”

In fact, the US constitution gives federal judges the right to rule on cases involving the president as part of their oversight role of the other branches of government.

Vance’s comments — which came after a judge blocked tech billionaire Elon Musk’s so-called “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE) from accessing Americans’ personal data — earned him a rebuke from legal scholars and political opponents.

“If you believe any of the multiple federal courts that have ruled against you so far are exceeding their statutory or constitutional authority, your recourse is to appeal,” Liz Cheney, a former Republican lawmaker and vocal Trump critic, replied.

“You don’t get to rage-quit the Republic just because you are losing. That’s tyranny.”

The DOGE injunction also came under attack from Musk, who complained of a “corrupt judge protecting corruption” and proposed that 1 per cent of the federal judiciary be fired every year.

In an X post on Tuesday, Musk claimed that “democracy in America is being destroyed by judicial coup”.

But critics characterize the deluge of criticism from the world’s richest man, the US president and the vice president as a coordinated assault on the rule of law.

“This is not just a musing from a dude with some various ideas,” tech commentator and veteran Musk watcher Kara Swisher said of the Spacex and Tesla CEO.

“The next step is to hollow out the judiciary and also not follow their rulings, which have been against Musk’s efforts. This is a very obvious coup, for those not paying attention.”

The criticism has not halted the frenetic pace of the White House under Trump, who has signed more than 75 executive orders and other edicts, outpacing recent predecessors.

On Monday he boosted tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, announced a crackdown on paper straws and abolished the minting of pennies.

Spain to give legal status to migrants affected by deadly floods

By - Feb 11,2025 - Last updated at Feb 11,2025

MADRID — Spain's leftist government said on Tuesday it will give one-year residence and work permits to undocumented migrants affected by last year's devastating floods that killed over 200 people.

The measure approved by the cabinet is part of the government's recovery response to the October 2024 disaster, which laid waste to swathes of the eastern Valencia region, an industrial and agricultural powerhouse.

The one-year permits will be granted due to the "exceptional circumstances" faced by illegal migrants during Spain's worst floods in decades, the migration ministry said in a statement.

Once they expire, they can be renewed through regular channels.

Foreigners who lost relatives in the floods will be given five-year residency while foreigners who were living legally in the affected area can request that their residency permits be automatically renewed.

Permits can be denied if there are concerns over public order, security or health, according to the ministry.

The government expects the measures will benefit at least 25,000 people.

The man charged by the regional government of Valencia to lead the reconstruction effort, retired General Francisco Jose Gan Pampols, welcomed the measure, saying many companies in the affected area struggled to find workers.

"If these people can carry out any of the many jobs that need doing in the region, they are more than welcome," he told reporters.

Unlike most of his peers in Europe, Spain's Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has adopted an open stance on migration, arguing the country needs immigrants to fill workforce gaps and counteract an ageing population that could imperil pensions and the welfare state.

His government in November announced an immigration law reform regularising tens of thousands more migrants per year.

The October 2024 floods caused significant damage in about 80 cities and claimed 232 lives nationwide, with most of the deaths in Valencia.

 

Sweden jails woman for keeping Yazidi slaves in Syria

By - Feb 11,2025 - Last updated at Feb 11,2025

STOCKHOLM — A Swedish court on Tuesday sentenced a 52-year-old woman to 12 years in prison on genocide charges, in the country's first court case over crimes committed by the Daesh group against the Yazidi minority.


Accused of keeping Yazidi women and children as slaves at her home in Syria in the winter and spring of 2015, Lina Ishaq was convicted of "genocide" and "crimes against humanity", as well as war crimes, the court said in a statement.

The court in Stockholm said her crimes warranted a sentence of 16 years, but taking a previous sentence into account set the sentence to 12.

The woman, who is a Swedish citizen, was in jail having already been sentenced by a Swedish court to six years in prison in 2022 for allowing her 12-year-old son to be recruited as an IS child soldier.

The court said on Tuesday's case concerned nine injured parties, six of whom were children at the time.

All the plaintiffs had been captured by Daesh in a series of attacks on Yazidi villages that began in August 2014 in Sinjar, Iraq, and their male relatives had been executed.

After about five months of captivity, they arrived at the convicted woman's home in Raqqa.

"The woman kept them imprisoned and treated them as her property by holding them as slaves for a period of, in most cases, five months," the court said.

 

Forced conversion

 

Their movement was restricted, they were made to perform chores and some had been photographed in preparation to be transferred to others.

"Given the fact that she participated in the onward transfer of the injured parties, she is also responsible for enabling their continued imprisonment and enslavement," the court said.

Ishaq also forced the plaintiffs to "become practising Muslims" by making them recite Koran verses and pray four or five times a day.

She also called the injured parties "demeaning invectives such as 'infidels' or 'slaves'", the court said.

The court stressed "that the comprehensive system of enslavement" was one of "the crucial elements" implemented by Daesh in "the perpetration of the genocide, the crimes against humanity and gross war crimes that the Yazidi population was subjected to".

As such, the court said "the woman shared the Daesh intent to destroy a religious group".

Mikael Westerlund, Lina Ishaq's lawyer, said his client had not yet decided whether to appeal, but said they were pleased that they court had not handed down a life sentence as requested by the prosecution.

"It was important for the prosecution to sentence her for life," he told AFP.

Around 300 Swedes or Swedish residents, a quarter of them women, joined Daesh in Syria and Iraq, mostly in 2013 and 2014, according to Sweden's intelligence service Sapo.

Ishaq grew up in a Christian Iraqi family in Sweden but converted to Islam after meeting her late husband and Islamist Jiro Mehho, with whom she had six children, in the mid-1990s.

She travelled to Syria with her children in 2013. Mehho died in August 2013, and Ishaq moved to Raqqa in 2014 and re-married.

 

Fresh fighting flares in eastern DR Congo

By - Feb 11,2025 - Last updated at Feb 11,2025

Internally displaced persons gather their belonging while leaving the displaced camp in Bulengo, Goma, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

BUKAVU, DR Congo — Fighting erupted Tuesday in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, three days after a call by African leaders for a ceasefire and a brief lull in the conflict.


Rwanda-backed M23 fighters attacked Congolese army positions in South Kivu province at dawn, local and security sources told AFP.

The resurgence comes after east and southern African leaders called on their general staff to propose a plan for implementing an "unconditional" ceasefire by Thursday, in a conflict which has killed thousands and driven vast numbers from their homes.

The M23 has in recent months swiftly seized tracts of territory in mineral-rich east DRC after again taking up arms in late 2021, in a country plagued by numerous conflicts for decades.

The armed group began advancing in South Kivu after taking control of Goma, the capital of neighbouring North Kivu province that borders Rwanda, at the end of last month.

Clashes took place Tuesday near the village of Ihusi, around 70 kilometres from the provincial capital Bukavu and 40 kilometres from the province's airport, according to security sources.

Several local sources reported "detonations of heavy weapons".

Kavumu airport is used by the Congolese army to transport reinforcements of men and equipment to the region and its main military base is located nearby.

Bukavu has been preparing for an M23 offensive for several days, with schools shuttering in the city Friday as residents began to flee and shops closed over fears of an imminent attack.

Banks were still shut in the city Tuesday.

The capture of Bukavu would give full control of Lake Kivu to the M23 and Rwandan troops.

The anti-governmental group, which claims to want to "liberate all of Congo" and oust President Felix Tshisekedi, has attempted in recent days to advance into the highlands overlooking the main road to Bukavu to cut off the DRC army's supply lines.

But Burundian soldiers, who are in east DRC to support the Congolese army, stopped the M23 advances, security sources said.

Around 10,000 Burundian soldiers are deployed in South Kivu, according to a security source.

Bujumbura sent at least one additional army battalion to the area Friday, a security source told AFP.

The M23 has begun setting up its own administration in Goma, a city of one million people, launching recruitment campaigns, including to create a police force.

Cholera

The humanitarian situation in Goma is worsening with no running water in large parts of the city and residents forced to take water from Lake Kivu, where bodies were recovered after the fighting.

An increase in cholera cases has been seen in the region, particularly among people displaced by the conflict, UN humanitarian agency, OCHA, said.

The crisis in east DRC is set to be discussed at an African Union meeting in Addis Ababa on Friday.

With the recent intensification of the conflict, calls for de-escalation from the international community have increased amid fears the fighting could lead to a regional war.

But diplomatic efforts to resolve the conflict that has lasted for more than three years have so far been unsuccessful.

The DRC has called for "targeted sanctions" against Rwanda but with little effect.

Kinshasa accuses Kigali of wanting to plunder natural resources in the DRC, such as tantalum and tin used in batteries and electronic equipment, as well as gold.

Rwanda denies this, saying it wants to remove armed groups it believes pose a permanent threat to its security, notably the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), created by former Hutu leaders of the 1994 genocide against Tutsis in Rwanda.

Different conflicts and rebellions have plagued the country for more than 30 years.

 

UK's Starmer urges world leaders to test for HIV

By - Feb 10,2025 - Last updated at Feb 10,2025

LONDON — Keir Starmer has urged other world leaders to take an HIV test, after becoming the first serving British prime minister and G7 leader to take a public test on camera. 

 

His office on Monday released footage of the UK leader completing a rapid home test in Downing Street on Friday, in support of a week-long nationwide initiative to encourage HIV testing. 

 

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) estimates 4,700 people are living with undiagnosed HIV in England, with increased testing a key part of the strategy to find them. 

 

Starmer in December committed his government to ending new HIV cases in England by 2030, with a new "HIV action plan" detailing how it will meet the target to be published later this year. 

 

"I suppose my task now is to talk to prime ministers and leaders across the world and say, you too should do it in your own country," he told Britain's Metro newspaper, immediately after completing the test.

 

"If people test, they will know their status, it is better that people know," he added in comments released by his office.

 

"You can then get access to treatment, and that will also help meet our collective target to end new HIV transmissions by 2030."

 

The week-long testing initiative, delivered by Terrence Higgins Trust and funded by the Department of Health and Social Care, has been running annually in England since 2012. 

 

During the week anyone nationwide can order a free HIV test, with two types of at home testing kits available. 

 

One provides results within 15 minutes while another "self-sampling" kit, which also tests for syphilis, can be sent to a laboratory for results. 

 

Key partner in S.Africa unity govt seeks to annul land reform act

By - Feb 10,2025 - Last updated at Feb 10,2025

JOHANNESBURG — The second-largest partner in South Africa's unity government said Monday it had launched a court bid to annul an "unconstitutional" land expropriation act that has sparked a major spat with US President Donald Trump.

President Cyril Ramaphosa signed a bill last month that stipulates the government may, in certain circumstances, offer "nil compensation" for property it decides to expropriate in the public interest.

Trump, whose ally Elon Musk was born in South Africa under apartheid, alleges the law allows land to be seized from white farmers and has issued an order to freeze aid to South Africa.

Land ownership remains a contentious issue in South Africa, with most farmland still owned by white people three decades after the end of apartheid.

It is a legacy of a policy of expropriating land from the black population that endured during apartheid and the colonial period before it.

"The DA has filed papers in the High Court to challenge the recently signed Expropriation Act, because the Act is unconstitutional, both substantively and procedurally," the Democratic Alliance (DA), South Africa's only white-led party, said in a statement.

"The Act is vague and contradictory in several clauses," the pro-business DA added.

Ramaphosa's African National Congress failed to win enough votes in elections last May to govern alone, a first since the party took power in 1994 and ended decades of white-minority apartheid rule.

It was forced into an uneasy coalition with the former opposition DA, which heads six ministries, and eight other parties.

The new law allows the government, as a matter of public interest, to decide on expropriations without compensation but only in certain exceptional circumstances where it would be "just and equitable".

The act replaces a 1975 apartheid-era law to align it with the post-apartheid constitution.

It has fuelled fears of a similar scenario as in Zimbabwe in the 2000s when thousands of white farmers were stripped of their land.

White South Africans make up around seven percent of the population, according to data from 2022.

South Africa on Saturday condemned a "campaign of misinformation" after Trump claimed the law would "enable the government of South Africa to seize ethnic minority Afrikaners' agricultural property without compensation".

 

Trump: Palestinians have no right of return under Gaza plan

By - Feb 10,2025 - Last updated at Feb 12,2025

US President Donald Trump arrives at the White House in Washington, DC, following a trip to New Orleans, Louisiana, for the NFL Super Bowl on February 10, 2025 (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said Palestinians would have no right of return to Gaza under his US takeover plan, describing his proposal in excerpts of an interview released Monday as a "real estate development for the future."

 

Trump told Fox News Channel's Bret Baier that "I would own it" and that there could be as many as six different sites for Palestinians to live outside Gaza under the plan, which the Arab world and others in the international community have rejected.

 

"No, they wouldn't, because they're going to have much better housing," Trump said when Baier asked if the Palestinians would have the right to return to the enclave, most of which has been reduced to rubble by Israel's military since October 2023.

 

"In other words, I'm talking about building a permanent place for them because if they have to return now, it'll be years before you could ever -- it's not habitable."

 

Trump first revealed the shock Gaza plan during a joint news conference with visiting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday, drawing outrage from Palestinians.

 

The US president pressed his case for Palestinians to be moved out of Gaza, devastated by the Israel-Hamas war, and for Egypt and Jordan to take them.

 

In the Fox interview -- which will be broadcast Monday after the first half was screened a day earlier -- Trump said he would build "beautiful communities" for the more than two million Palestinians who live in Gaza.

 

"Could be five, six, could be two. But we'll build safe communities, a little bit away from where they are, where all of this danger is," added Trump.

 

"In the meantime, I would own this. Think of it as a real estate development for the future. It would be a beautiful piece of land. No big money spent."

 

 'Unacceptable' 

 

Trump stunned the world when he announced out of the blue last week that the United States would "take over the Gaza Strip," remove rubble and unexploded bombs and turn it into the "Riviera of the Middle East."

 

But while he initially said that Palestinians could be among the "world people" allowed to live there, he has since appeared to harden his position to suggest that they could not.

 

Netanyahu on Sunday praised Trump's proposal as "revolutionary", striking a triumphant tone in a statement to his cabinet following his return from Washington.

 

"President Trump came with a completely different, much better vision for Israel," said Netanyahu, who was reportedly only briefed on the plan shortly before Trump's announcement.

 

The reaction from much of the rest of the world has been one of outrage, with Egypt, Jordan, other Arab nations and the Palestinians all rejecting it out of hand.

 

The criticism was not limited to the Arab world, with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Sunday labeling the plan "a scandal," adding that the forced relocation of Palestinians would be "unacceptable and against international law."

 

Trump's plan has also threatened to disrupt the fragile six-week ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, and the chances of it progressing to a second, more permanent phase.

 

Trump, however, repeated his insistence that he could persuade Egypt and Jordan to come around.

 

"I think I could make a deal with Jordan. I think I could make a deal with Egypt. You know, we give them billions and billions of dollars a year," he told Fox. 

 

Last year, Trump described Gaza as being "like Monaco," while his son-in-law Jared Kushner suggested that Israel could clear Gaza of civilians to unlock "waterfront property."

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