Category: 2. World

  • Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Monday said Donald Trump showed a “clear stance and expressed determination” after the US president said he would cut the 50-day deadline he set for Russia to negotiate peace in Ukraine. Trump on Monday set a new but still imprecise deadline of “10 or 12 days from today” for Russia to make progress towards peace or face consequences. Trump’s previous deadlines to end the war have included “one day … 24 hours” and “about two weeks … within two weeks” as well as “50 days”.

  • Two weeks had already passed since Trump threatened to act within 50 days, leaving 36 days remaining of the original deadline. The new ultimatum of “10 or 12 days” means the US president has given Putin about 25 fewer days to deliberate. Trump has threatened sanctions on both Russia and buyers of its exports unless progress is made.

  • On Monday, Trump indicated he was not interested in talking directly to Putin. “If you know what the answer is going to be, why wait? And it would be sanctions and maybe tariffs, secondary tariffs,” Trump said. “I don’t want to do that to Russia. I love the Russian people.” Zelenskyy said: “I thank President Trump for his focus on saving lives and stopping this horrible war … Russia pays attention to sanctions, pays attention to such losses.”

  • At least 20 people were killed and more than 40 wounded in Russian strikes overnight into Tuesday, Ukrainian officials said. Sixteen people died when a penitentiary facility in the Zaporizhzhia region was hit, with at least 35 more people injured and nearby private homes also damaged, said the Ukrainian military and Ivan Fedorov, the regional governor. Another four people were killed and more wounded in attacks on the Dnipropetrovsk region, according to regional officials.

  • The Russian airline Aeroflot was forced to cancel dozens of flights on Monday after an established pro-Ukraine hacking group said it had carried out a cyber-attack. Dan Milmo reports how departure boards at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport turned red as flights were cancelled at a time when many Russians take their holidays. Irate passengers vented their anger on social media. One wrote: “I’ve been sitting at the Volgograd airport since 3:30! The flight has been rescheduled for the third time!” Another posted: “The call centre is unavailable, the website is unavailable, the app is unavailable.”

  • A statement purporting to be from a hacking group called Silent Crow said it had carried out the operation with a Belarusian group called Cyber Partisans, and linked it to the war in Ukraine. “Glory to Ukraine! Long live Belarus!” said the statement. Silent Crow said the cyber-attack was the result of a year-long operation that had deeply penetrated Aeroflot’s network, destroyed 7,000 servers and gained control over the personal computers of employers including senior managers. It did not provide evidence. It threatened to shortly start releasing “the personal data of all Russians who have ever flown Aeroflot”.

  • Pjotr Sauer meanwhile reports how tens of thousands of passengers have seen their travel plans thrown into chaos in recent weeks, as Ukrainian drones repeatedly disrupt Russian airspace. The systematic Ukrainian campaigns aims to bring the war home to ordinary Russians, many of whom have otherwise experienced it only from their television screens. Pjotr Sauer writes that Ukrainian civilians live under the constant threat of being killed by missiles and drones, and Ukrainian officials have emphasised that life in Russia should not be comfortable for “a population that, by and large, continues to support the war. The tactic seems to be bearing fruit: regular airport shutdowns and missed holidays have become a major talking point among the Russian public and a growing source of frustration.”

  • Blackouts took place in parts of Russian-occupied Donetsk during a mass attack by Ukrainian drones on Monday, according to reports. The electricity distributor Donetskenergo said three substations were hit, leaving about 160,000 customers without power. The independent Russian-run Astra Telegram channel said the Donbas Palace Hotel in Donetsk city was also hit.

  • Ukraine’s Sumy region came under Russian attack on Monday into Tuesday evening, local officials reported. A man, 45, was injured by a drone while taking a cow out to pasture in the Krasnopil community, said Oleg Grigorov, head of the Sumy regional administration. A man, 66, was injured when his apartment was shelled. “At around 5.45pm, the Russians attacked the Burynska community with four attack UAVs. The strike destroyed a local store,” Grigorov said. “One of the saleswomen was injured – she was promptly provided with medical assistance and her life is not in danger. Damage was also recorded to residential buildings, a cultural centre, non-residential premises and cars.”

  • The US-German defence company Auterion will provide 33,000 artificial intelligence guidance kits for Ukrainian drones funded by a $50m Pentagon contract. According to the company, the kits enable manually piloted strike drones to autonomously track and hit targets up to a kilometre away – one way of circumventing electronic jamming that can cut a drone off from its operator. “We have previously shipped thousands of our AI strike systems to Ukraine, but this new deployment increases our support more than tenfold,” said the CEO of Auterion, Lorenz Meier.

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  • France calls on EU to pressure Israel on two-state solution

    France calls on EU to pressure Israel on two-state solution

    UNITED NATIONS (AP) — France on Monday called on the European Union to pressure Israel to agree to a two-state solution with the Palestinians, the latest escalation from the French as they seek an end to the deadly Gaza war days after pledging to recognize Palestine as a state.

    Jean-Noël Barrot, the French foreign minister, told reporters at the United Nations that while there is international consensus that the time for a political solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is now, world powers need to back up their words with actions.

    “The European Commission, on behalf of the EU, has to express its expectations and show the means that we can incentivize the Israeli government to hear this appeal,” he said.

    Barrot spoke on the first day of a high-level U.N. meeting on a two-state solution to the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which is being co-chaired by France and Saudi Arabia.

    The conference, which was postponed from June and downgraded to the ministerial level, is taking place in New York as international condemnation of Israel’s handling of the war in Gaza reaches a fever pitch. Both Israel and its closest ally, the United States, refused to participate in the meeting, which Barrot said is being attended by representatives of 125 countries, including 50 ministers.

    The aim of the conference, Barrot said, is “to reverse the trend of what is happening in the region — mainly the erasure of the two-state solution, which has been for a long time the only solution that can bring peace and security in the region.”

    He urged the European Commission to call on Israel to lift a financial blockade on 2 billion euros he says the Israeli government owes the Palestinian Authority, stop settlement building in the West Bank, which threatens the territorial integrity of a future Palestinian state, and end the “militarized” food delivery system in Gaza by the Israeli-backed U.S. Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which has resulted in hundreds of killings.

    Dubravka Šuica, the European Commissioner for the Mediterranean, told the meeting the EU is examining new sanctions and said it’s “imperative” that Israel transfer money owed to the Palestinians, and allow the delivery of food and other aid to Gaza.

    She said the EU has been a long-term partner promoting reforms of the Palestinian Authority and welcomed the recent announcement of presidential and general elections within a year across the Palestinian territories. “We are keeping the Palestinian Authority from financial collapse,” she said, underscoring that the EU is supporting it with 161.6 billion euros for the next three years.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected the two-state solution on both nationalistic and security grounds. The U.S. has echoed that sentiment and on Monday called the conference “unproductive and ill-timed.”

    “The United States will not participate in this insult but will continue to lead real-world efforts to end the fighting and deliver a permanent peace,” State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce said in a statement. “Our focus remains on serious diplomacy: not stage-managed conferences designed to manufacture the appearance of relevance.”

    Ahead of the meeting, French President Emmanuel Macron announced that France would recognize Palestine as a state at the annual gathering of world leaders at the U.N. General Assembly in September. The bold but mostly symbolic move is aimed at adding diplomatic pressure on Israel.

    France is now the biggest Western power and the only member of the Group of Seven major industrialized nations to recognize the state of Palestine, and the move could pave the way for other countries to do the same. More than 140 countries recognize a Palestinian state, including more than a dozen in Europe.

    At the conference opening, Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammed Mustafa called for all countries that have not yet recognized Palestine as a state to do so “without delay.”

    “The path to peace begins by recognizing the state of Palestine and preserving it from destruction,” he said.

    The other issue being discussed at the conference is normalization between Israel and the Arab states in the region. Prince Faisal bin Farhan, the Saudi foreign minister, stressed that normalization of relations with Israel “can only come through the establishment of a Palestinian state.”

    With global anger rising over desperately hungry people in Gaza starting to die from starvation, U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday called for increasing aid to Palestinians, a rare glimpse of daylight between him and Netanyahu, who has said there is no starvation.

    Both Barrot and Farhan said Monday that the U.S. is an essential actor in the region and that it was the American president in January who secured the only ceasefire in the 21-month war.

    “I am firmly in the belief that Trump’s engagement can be a catalyst for an end to the immediate crisis in Gaza and potentially a resolution of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict in the long term,” Farhan said.


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  • China floods: 30 killed in Beijing after days of heavy rain

    China floods: 30 killed in Beijing after days of heavy rain

    Heavy rains and floods kill 30 in Beijingpublished at 01:38 British Summer Time

    Torrential rains and floods in northern China since the weekend have killed
    30 people in Beijing, authorities say.

    Beijing officials have issued the highest flood emergency
    alert. More than 80,000 people have been relocated since the rains started on
    Saturday.

    The deluge is
    forecast to continue at least until midday today.

    Stay with us
    as we bring you the latest.

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  • China floods: more than 30 killed in Beijing and tens of thousands evacuated | China

    China floods: more than 30 killed in Beijing and tens of thousands evacuated | China

    More than 30 people have been killed by heavy rain and flooding in Beijing and a neighbouring region, state media have reported, as tens of thousands more were evacuated from China’s capital.

    State broadcaster CCTV said that as of midnight on Monday, 28 people had died in Beijing’s hard-hit Miyun district and two others in Yanqing district as of midnight. Both are outlying parts of the sprawling city, far from the downtown.

    On Monday a landslide in neighbouring Hebei province killed four people, with eight other still missing.

    Heavy rain started over the weekend and intensified around Beijing and surrounding provinces on Monday, with the capital getting rainfall of up to 543.4mm in its northern districts, Xinhua said.

    A resident carrying a table walks through a flooded area in Miyun district. Photograph: Jade Gao/AFP/Getty Images

    Beijing relocated 80,322 residents as the rain hit, Xinhua reported. Roads and communication infrastructure were damaged, and 136 villages were left without power as of midnight Monday.

    Late on Monday, Chinese president Xi Jinping ordered “all-out” search and rescue efforts to minimise casualties.

    Beijing issued its highest-level rain and flood alerts on Monday, advising residents to not leave their homes.

    Authorities released water from a reservoir in Miyun district that was at its highest level since it was built in 1959. Authorities warned people to stay away from rivers downstream as their levels rose and as more heavy rain was forecast.

    Heavy flooding washed away cars and downed power poles in Miyun, which borders Hebei’s Luanping county.

    Uprooted trees lay in piles with their bare roots exposed in the town of Taishitun, about 100km northeast of central Beijing. Streets were covered with water, with mud left higher up on the wall.

    A damaged road at a flooded area in Miyun district. Photograph: Jade Gao/AFP/Getty Images

    “The flood came rushing in, just like that, so fast and suddenly. In no time at all, the place was filling up,” said Zhuang Zhelin, who was clearing mud with his family from their building materials shop.

    Beijing authorities launched a top-level emergency response on Monday evening, ordering people to stay inside, closing schools, suspending construction work and stopping outdoor tourism and other activities until the response is lifted.

    The heaviest rain in Beijing was expected early Tuesday, with rainfall of up to 30cm forecast for some areas.

    The central government said in a statement it had sent 50m yuan (about $7m) to Hebei and dispatched a high-level team of emergency responders to help the affected areas.

    Human-caused climate breakdown is supercharging extreme weather across the world, driving more frequent and more deadly disasters from heatwaves to floods to wildfires. At least a dozen of the most serious events of the last decade would have been all but impossible without human-caused global heating.

    With Reuters, the Associated Press and Agence France-Presse

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  • Thailand-Cambodia ceasefire comes into effect as opposing military chiefs to meet | Thailand

    Thailand-Cambodia ceasefire comes into effect as opposing military chiefs to meet | Thailand

    A truce agreement between Thailand and Cambodia came into effect in the early hours of Tuesday, testing whether it will halt the worst fighting between the neighbouring countries in more than a decade.

    Both sides agreed an “unconditional” ceasefire would start at midnight on Monday to end battling over a smattering of ancient temples in disputed zones along their 800km (500-mile) border.

    In Cambodia’s Samraong city – 20km from the border – an AFP journalist heard a steady drumbeat of artillery strikes throughout Monday before blast sounds stopped in the 30 minutes leading up to midnight.

    Jets, rockets and artillery have killed at least 38 people since Thursday and displaced nearly 300,000 more – prompting intervention at the weekend from Donald Trump, who has taken credit for the ceasefire deal. The US president has threatened both countries with high tariffs and warned that trade negotiations would be paused until the fighting stopped.

    The peace deal was set to see military commanders from both sides meet at 7am local time (0000 GMT), before a cross-border committee is convened in Cambodia to further salve tensions on 4 August.

    “When I heard the news I was so happy because I miss my home and my belongings that I left behind,” Phean Neth, 45, said on Monday evening at a sprawling camp for Cambodian evacuees on a temple site away from the fighting. “I am so happy that I can’t describe it.”

    A joint statement from both countries as well as Malaysia, which hosted the peace talks, said the ceasefire was “a vital first step towards de-escalation and the restoration of peace and security”.

    A spokesperson for UN secretary general, António Guterres, said on Monday evening that “he urges both countries to respect the agreement fully and to create an environment conducive to addressing longstanding issues and achieving lasting peace”.

    The US state department said its officials had been “on the ground” to shepherd peace talks.

    The joint statement said China also had “active participation” in the talks, hosted by the Malaysian prime minister and chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) regional bloc, Anwar Ibrahim, in his country’s administrative capital, Putrajaya.

    Cambodia’s prime minister, Hun Manet, thanked Trump for his “decisive” support, while his counterpart, Thailand’s acting prime minister Phumtham Wechayachai, said it should be “carried out in good faith by both sides”.

    On the eve of the talks, Thailand’s military said Cambodian snipers were camped in one of the contested temples, and accused Phnom Penh of surging troops along the border and hammering Thai territory with rockets.

    It said there was fighting at seven areas in the rural region, marked by hills surrounded by jungle and fields where locals farm rubber and rice.

    The Thai king, Maha Vajiralongkorn, marked his 73rd birthday on Monday but a notice in the country’s Royal Gazette said public celebrations scheduled for Bangkok’s Grand Palace had been cancelled amid the strife.

    With reporting from Rebecca Ratcliffe and Agence France-Presse

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  • Thirty dead in Beijing following heavy rain, Xinhua reports – Reuters

    1. Thirty dead in Beijing following heavy rain, Xinhua reports  Reuters
    2. Landslide kills four, eight missing in China’s Hebei province amidst torrential rains  Ptv.com.pk
    3. Heavy rains kill four in China as flood warnings issued in 11 provinces  Al Jazeera
    4. Storms unleash a year’s rain on Chinese city in one day  Dawn
    5. President Xi urges all-out efforts to safeguard people’s lives amid floods  news.cgtn.com

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  • Beijing floods: At least 30 dead in China’s capital after days of heavy rain

    Beijing floods: At least 30 dead in China’s capital after days of heavy rain

    Days of heavy rain have killed at least 30 people in the mountainous northern outskirts of Beijing, state media reported Tuesday.

    Intense rainstorms have battered northern China in recent days, triggering flooding and landslides. A landslide in Hebei province, which neighbors Beijing, killed four people, with eight others still missing, according to state media.

    The rains intensified around the Chinese capital on Monday, killing 28 people in Miyun, an outlying mountainous district in the northeast; another two were killed in Yangqing, another northern district, China’s state broadcaster CCTV reported.

    The downpours have also damanged dozens of roads and cut off electricity for 136 villages. More than 80,000 people have been relocated, including about 17,000 in Miyun, according to CCTV.

    Footage circulating on social media shows brown floodwater sweeping through residential communities, washing away cars, knocking down electricity and turning streets into rivers in Miyun.

    On Monday, Beijing issued its highest-level flood alert, urging residents to stay away from swelling rivers. The city’s meteorological observatory also issued a red alert for rainstorms – the highest in a four-tier system, warning of intensifying rain during the night and “extremely high risk” of flash floods, mudslides and landslides in mountainous areas.

    By Monday evening, authorities have ordered schools to be shut, all scenic spots across the city to be closed, and all rural homestays and campsites to suspend operations.

    The heavy rainfall and the accompanying floods and geological disasters have caused “significant casualties and property losses” in Beijing and the northern provinces of Hebei, Jilin and Shandong, Chinese leader Xi Jinping said on Monday, according to CCTV.

    Xi instructed officials to make “all-out effort” to search and rescue those still missing, properly evacuate resettle residents at risk and minimize casualties to the greatest extent possible.

    This is a developing story and will be updated.


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  • New York shooting: gunman kills four people at Manhattan skyscraper | New York

    New York shooting: gunman kills four people at Manhattan skyscraper | New York

    A gunman killed four people at a Manhattan skyscraper that houses the headquarters of the NFL and the offices of several major financial firms before turning the gun on himself, New York officials have said.

    An NYPD officer identified as Didarul Islam, an immigrant from Bangladesh and a father of two whose wife is pregnant, was among those killed. He was working off-hours as a security guard at the time, New York mayor Eric Adams told reporters, describing him as a “true blue hero”.

    Authorities offered few details about the three other victims killed by the suspect – two men and a woman. A third male was gravely wounded by the gunfire and was “fighting for his life” in a nearby hospital, the mayor said.

    Jessica Tisch, the New York City police commissioner, confirmed that “the lone shooter has been neutralized”. New York police also said the shooter acted alone and was dead.

    Park Avenue in Manhattan, on Monday night. Photograph: Blake Sharp-Wiggins/The Guardian

    Tisch said the gunman, identified as Shane Tamura, a 27-year-old Las Vegas resident with a history of mental illness, had driven cross-country to New York in recent days.

    The shooting spree in the evening rush hour began in the lobby of the Park Avenue tower in Midtown Manhattan. Tisch said that surveillance videos showed the gunman exiting a double-parked Black BMW between 51st and 52nd street on Park Avenue.

    He allegedly opened fire immediately after entering the tower’s lobby, shooting multiple people. Police said that the gunman let a woman exit the elevator unharmed, and then took the elevator to the 33rd floor, the offices of Rudin Management Company, a behemoth New York real estate firm.

    Tisch said that the gunman opened fire on the 33rd floor and killed one person. The gunman then went to the stairwell and shot himself with an assault rifle, she said.

    Photographs show people exiting the building around 7pm ET with hands raised.

    Tisch said that the NYPD found weapons in the parked BMW, as well as a prescription in Tamora’s name.

    Tisch said Tamora entered the office fresh after driving across the country, making stops in Colorado, Nebraska and Iowa. Tamora’s final alleged stop was in New Jersey at 4.24pm ET.

    The NYPD believes that the shooting was an isolated incident.

    Emergency services at 49th and Park Ave, on Monday night. Photograph: Blake Sharp-Wiggins/The Guardian

    US House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries expressed his concern over the “horrific shooting”, and said he was “praying hard” for the NYPD officer.

    “May God watch over our city during this challenging moment,” Jeffries wrote in a post.

    A large police presence converged on the area around the tower, according to Reuters journalists near the scene.

    “I just saw a lot of commotion and cops and people screaming,” said Russ McGee, a 31-year-old sports bettor who was working out in a gym adjacent to the skyscraper, told Reuters in an interview near the scene.

    The office building at 345 Park Avenue occupies an entire city block and houses the corporate offices for the National Football League and the headquarters of investment firm Blackstone. It also holds offices for JP Morgan Chase.

    According to an ESPN reporter, Jeff Darlington, an NFL security alert was sent to employees: “Do not exit the building. Secure your location and hide until law enforcement clears your floor. Please switch phones to silent.”

    This shooting is the 254th mass shooting in the US this year, according to the Gun Violence Archive, a nonprofit that tracks gun-related violence, who defines a mass shooting as an incident in which four or more people, excluding the shooter, are killed or injured by firearms.

    With Reuters

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  • EU and Gulf states aligned on path to peace in Palestine, top EU official tells Arab News

    EU and Gulf states aligned on path to peace in Palestine, top EU official tells Arab News

    NEW YORK CITY: The EU and Gulf nations, led by Saudi Arabia, are increasingly aligned in their calls for a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas, the provision of humanitarian relief, and a political path forward in Gaza and the West Bank, according to EU’s commissioner for the Mediterranean, Dubravka Suica.

    Speaking to Arab News on the sidelines of a high-level international conference at the UN in New York this week, Suica emphasized a shared interest in “peace, security and prosperity” as the foundation for deeper EU-Gulf cooperation on the Israeli-Palestinian issue.

    Formally titled the “High-Level International Conference for the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine and the Implementation of the Two-State Solution,” the two-day event, co-chaired by Saudi Arabia and France, began on Monday. It brought together top global actors, including the EU, the UN and major Arab states, in what was described as a critical turning point in efforts to revive peace talks and lay the groundwork for post-conflict reconstruction in Gaza.

    “This is a historic moment,” Suica told Arab News. “We are mature enough, and seeing what is going on the ground, this conference might be the trigger to say enough is enough.”

    She was unequivocal in her support for the Saudi-led initiative and the Arab Peace Initiative, saying: “We are aligned on that. We would like to follow, we would like to engage.”

    The EU and Gulf countries agree on the urgent need for a ceasefire agreement, she added, and a diplomatic track that guarantees security for both Israelis and Palestinians.

    Suica said the role of the EU extends beyond diplomacy to include direct financial support, particularly for efforts to strengthen the Palestinian Authority.

    “We don’t want to be only a payer, we want to be a player,” she added. “We are financing the Palestinian Authority because we think we have to empower them to be our interlocutor on the ground.”

    While the lead diplomatic role lies with the EU’s foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, Suica said her own focus is on the economic dimension, particularly reconstruction and institutional development in a postwar Gaza. She confirmed that the EU would launch a donors’ platform in the fall to help coordinate international aid for rebuilding the territory and the long-term development of Palestinian institutions.

    This includes €1.9 billion ($ 2.2 billion) earmarked for Palestinian reforms between now and 2027, of which €150 million has already been disbursed. The EU is also supporting the UN Relief and Works Agency, the only organization currently able to provide services such as healthcare and education on the ground.

    “But ultimately, our goal is for the Palestinian Authority to take over these services,” Suica said, underlining the long-term vision of the EU for a viable, independent Palestinian state.

    She acknowledged the complexities involved in dealing with the Israeli government, but said that while “Israel breached Article Two” of the EU-Israel Association Agreement, there was no consensus among EU member states for an outright suspension of the agreement.

    “We need a channel of communication with Israel. If we block everything, who is our interlocutor?” she said, while pointing to mounting pressure from public opinion and the media as other possible drivers for Israeli policy shifts.

    The EU remains united, however, on one key issue: the need for humanitarian aid for the people of Gaza.

    “All member states are on board,” Suica affirmed, and she criticized Israeli authorities for the slow implementation of previous humanitarian agreements, including the limited opening of border crossings to allow aid to enter Gaza.

    Nor did she mince her words when discussing Israeli policies in the West Bank, noting that tax revenues owed to the Palestinian Authority — money that is crucial for maintaining public services and governance — have been withheld for the past three months. She also denounced a rise in settler violence, which she said undermines prospects for a two-state solution.

    “Violent settlers on the ground is not acceptable,” Suica said. “We’ve had one or two rounds of sanctions, but for more we need unanimity, and that’s always a problem within the EU.”

    This week’s conference in New York, she added, is a “very good introduction” ahead of the UN’s General Assembly week in September, when key announcements are expected, including official recognition of the State of Palestine by more countries. France has already declared its intent to do so, and Suica hinted that other European nations might follow suit.

    This aligns with a broader “Peace Day Effort” launched by the EU, the Arab League, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt. This aims to build a comprehensive “peace-supporting package,” including economic, political and regional security cooperation mechanisms to help sustain peace once a final agreement is reached.

    “This is not just about Gaza,” Suica said. “This is about the future architecture of peace and security in the entire region. The Gulf countries are critical partners in this effort. We are aligned, and we are determined.”

    As the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza continues to unfold and violence spreads in the West Bank, the EU and its Arab partners are pushing for what might be the most coordinated international push for a two-state solution in more than a decade. With the clock ticking toward the UN’s General Assembly in September, the pressure is therefore on all sides to turn diplomatic hopes into lasting results.

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  • Is this the tipping point in Gaza? – Full Story podcast | Israel

    Is this the tipping point in Gaza? – Full Story podcast | Israel

    After days of international pressure, Israel has agreed to increase the amount of aid going into Gaza. It follows last week’s pictures coming out of the besieged territory showing confronting scenes of emaciated children. But experts say much more is needed to reverse what has been described as a full-blown starvation crisis.

    The Guardian’s William Christou speaks to Reged Ahmad from Jerusalem about whether this moment is a tipping point in the Israel-Gaza war

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