Hamas Rejects Reported Plan for US Takeover of Gaza
The Gaza Reconstitution, Economic Acceleration and Transformation Trust plan proposes a decade-long US trusteeship with population relocation and redevelopment financed by public and private investments.
- On Sunday, August 31, the Washington Post reported President Donald Trump’s administration proposed the Gaza Reconstitution, Economic Acceleration and Transformation Trust , aiming to transform Gaza Strip into a tourism and high-tech hub under U.S. trusteeship for ten years.
- Almost two years after October 7, 2023, Gaza remains devastated and displaced as President Donald Trump held an August 27 White House meeting with Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Steve Witkoff, Tony Blair, and Jared Kushner to discuss post-war planning.
- The prospectus envisions at least a temporary relocation of Gaza’s more than 2 million population via `voluntary` departures or secure zones, offering landowners a digital token redeemable for housing in six to eight AI-powered smart cities.
- Arab leaders condemned the idea, with Palestinians warning of a repeat of the Nakba; Hamas political bureau member Bassem Naim said Monday, `Gaza is not for sale.` Following United Nations criticism, the original framework was abandoned.
- The proposal relies on public and private investors funding mega projects to realize President Donald Trump's `Riviera of the Middle East` idea, though The Washington Post said its exact match to Trump's plan is unclear.
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This plan envisages the "voluntary" displacement of the 2 million inhabitants of the Gaza Strip in the time of its reconstruction and its transformation into a tourist and technological centre."Hamas rejects all these plans, which move our people and keep them occupied on our lands," said a Hamas official.
Not only the investigation into urban speculation in Milan that sees him among the suspects. L'archistar Stefano Boeri, in these hours, must also deal with another issue that concerns . Although indirectly his work. That is his most well-known project that is mentioned in the post-war plan drawn up by the U.S. Administration for the Gaza Strip.
In a 38-page "Washington Post" plan, the United States would consider moving the population and placing Gaza under its control. The State Department has not yet responded to the publication.
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