UN experts warn Trump Gaza plan would return world to ‘dark days of colonial conquest’
UN experts warn Trump Gaza plan would return world to ‘dark days of colonial conquest’/node/2589850/middle-east
UN experts warn Trump Gaza plan would return world to ‘dark days of colonial conquest’
Special
Men walk past the heavily-damaged Grand Palace Hotel in western Gaza City, on February 11, 2025, amid the current ceasefire deal in the war between Israel and Hamas. (AFP)
UN experts warn Trump Gaza plan would return world to ‘dark days of colonial conquest’
Call for US to facilitate permanent ceasefire, resume UNRWA funding, and compensate Palestinians for damage caused by US weapons
US should pressure Israel to pay for reconstruction and reparations, hold perpetrators of atrocities accountable, and support Palestinian statehood, experts say
NEW YORK: A group of more than 30 independent UN experts on Tuesday denounced threats by US President Donald Trump to “take over” and “own” Gaza, warning that such a move would usher in a new era of “predatory lawlessness.”
Referring to Trump’s suggestion that Gaza’s Palestinian population could be relocated through the use of military force if required, the experts said: “Such blatant violations by a major power would break the global taboo on military aggression and embolden other predatory countries to seize foreign territories, with devastating consequences for peace and human rights globally.”
They added that implementing the US proposal would “shatter the most fundamental rules of the international order and the United Nations Charter since 1945, which the US was instrumental in creating to restore peace after the catastrophic Second World War and Holocaust.
“It would return the world to the dark days of colonial conquest.”
The experts underscored that it was clearly unlawful to invade and seize foreign land by force; to forcibly expel inhabitants; and to deny the Palestinian people their fundamental right to self-determination, which includes keeping Gaza as part of a sovereign Palestinian state.
“Such violations would replace the international rule of law and the stability it brings with the lawless ‘rule of the strongest’.”
The experts include Ben Saul, the special rapporteur on the promotion of human rights while countering terrorism; Francesca Albanese, special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Occupied Palestinian territories, and George Katrougalos, an independent expert on the promotion of a democratic and equitable international order.
They said that just as more than 50 years of Israeli occupation of Palestine had failed to bring peace or security to either Israel or Palestine, a US occupation would have the same disastrous outcome, driving endless war, death, and destruction.
The mass deportation of civilians from occupied territories was classified as a war crime under the 1949 Geneva Conventions following the Second World War to prevent the repetition of actions such as Nazi Germany’s forced expulsion of populations from European nations.
“The US proposal would accelerate forced displacement of Palestinians from their lands, which began in the 1947-48 Nakba, and has since included home demolitions, evictions, destruction and theft of natural resources and the criminal building of illegal Israeli colonial settlements,” the experts warned.
During his previous term, Trump unlawfully acknowledged Israel’s illegal annexations of East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights, actions that have been condemned by the International Court of Justice, the UN General Assembly, the Security Council, and a vast majority of countries.
“If the US president is genuinely concerned for the welfare of Palestinians, the US should broker a lasting ceasefire, resume funding to UNRWA, compensate Palestinians for damage resulting from US weapons and munitions supplied to Israel despite the serious risk of violations of humanitarian law, and end arms transfers. It should also pressure Israel to fund reconstruction and provide reparation for violations, pursue accountability for perpetrators of international crimes, and meaningfully support Palestinian statehood,” they said.
The experts said that if the US president truly cares about the well-being of Palestinians, the US should facilitate a lasting ceasefire, resume funding to UNRWA, compensate Palestinians for the damage caused by US weapons and munitions provided to Israel despite the significant risk of humanitarian law violations, and halt arms transfers.
They added that the US should also urge Israel to finance reconstruction, offer reparations for violations, seek accountability for those responsible for international crimes, and genuinely support Palestinian statehood.
Israeli military action in Gaza has resulted in the deaths of over 48,100 Palestinians and left 110,000 injured, mostly women and children. The attacks have rendered 85 percent of the population, roughly 1.9 million people, homeless, and without access to sufficient food, water, and other basic needs. They have also severely damaged or destroyed most homes, agricultural land, public infrastructure, and caused extensive environmental harm.
Qatar’s emir heads to New York to participate in UN General Assembly
Updated 21 September 2025
Reuters
CAIRO: Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani has left for New York to participate in an upcoming meeting of the United Nations General Assembly, Qatar’s Amiri Diwan said on Sunday.
World leaders are gathering in New York as the war between Israel and Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip approaches two years. A humanitarian crisis is worsening in the Palestinian enclave, where a global hunger monitor has warned that famine has taken hold and is likely to spread by the end of the month.
DUBAI: The Arab world is often associated with deserts and dry landscapes, but across the region people are proving that greenery can thrive in cities.
For the first time in history, more people live in cities than in rural areas. By 2050, nearly two-thirds of the world’s population will be urban, according to the UN’s World Urbanization Prospects report.
Across the Arab world, that shift is already visible in how urban greenery is quietly reshaping city life.
Neglected spaces are being transformed, with rooftop gardens in Jordan and inner courtyards in Egypt. Meanwhile, community plots in Morocco and shaded biodiversity projects in Dubai offer new ways for residents to reconnect with nature.
A view of green park in the eastern part of Cairo, Egypt. (AFP)
But these initiatives are not just about plants — they are about food security, community life and mental well-being. At Expo City Dubai, recent projects highlight how greenery can serve all three goals.
“On a Dubai summer’s day, a rooftop can feel like an oven,” Phillip Dunn, senior manager of sustainability at Terra, an immersive educational and cultural space promoting ecology, sustainable technologies and design at the Expo City, told Arab News.
But with just a few design tweaks, such as trellises for shade, vertical screens to slow hot winds and condensate water reuse, those same slabs can be transformed into cool living habitats.
“Vegetated surfaces can be up to 40 degrees centigrade cooler than adjacent bare concrete,” said Dunn — a vivid reminder of how transformative even small pockets of greenery can be in some of the world’s hottest cities.
In Jordan’s capital Amman, the greater municipality has turned unused rooftops into productive green spaces.
A woman looks towards forests at the Al Ajloun reserve in Jordan. (Reuters/File photo)
In the citadel area alone, around 100 rooftops have been cleaned, prepared and planted with vegetables and herbs with the aim of improving the environment, creating cooler spaces and giving families access to fresh produce.
Nonprofits have also been central to this effort.
Anera provides emergency relief and sustainable development to improve the health, education and well-being of refugees and vulnerable communities in Palestine, Lebanon and Jordan.
Its rooftop garden program has helped families set up small-scale gardens with barrels, soil, seeds and even greenhouses.
A lovingly arranged rooftop farm has become an integral part of “Jadal” culture centre in Amman. (Photo Credit: Greening the Camps)
In 2025, it reported 79 new rooftop greenhouses in Marka and Wehdat, many of which are used by families to grow food, save money and sometimes sell surplus vegetables.
One participant in the program described their rooftop plot as both “a source of food” and “a mental relief.”
Studies by researchers at the University of Petra add a technical perspective.
They show that lightweight planting materials, proper waterproofing and smart irrigation like drip systems or greywater reuse are critical, offering “a unique chance to transform thousands of traditional roof surfaces to green life-giving environments.”
Amman’s rooftop gardens support biodiversity, sustainable absorption of rainwater, reduce ambient temperatures and foster social interaction
Amman’s rooftop gardens support biodiversity, sustainable absorption of rainwater, reduce ambient temperatures and foster social interaction. (FaceBook: High Garden Rooftop)
Other case studies in the city highlighted families growing thyme, basil, lettuce and cherry tomatoes — simple crops that thrive in rooftop conditions.
But this need for innovative green solutions is not unique to Jordan. In Cairo, for example, the shortage of accessible greenery is stark.
Urban Greens partners with Cairo schools to teach young people gardening. (Image courtesy of Urban Greens)
According to a study published in SpringerOpen’s Journal of Engineering and Applied Science, the average green space per person in Greater Cairo fell from about 0.87 sq. meters in 2017 to just 0.74 in 2020.
Of the city’s 37 districts, 22 — representing roughly two-thirds of the population — had less than 0.50 sq. meters per capita.
Over the same period, the city lost more than 900,000 sq. meters of green space.
To address this, Egypt’s Ministry of Environment launched a nationwide green-roof initiative in 2019.
That same year, the “Green Food from Green Roofs” program, funded by the Scientific Research Academy, promoted rooftop farming, sustainable diets and public awareness.
Egyptians gather in a park in the city of Qanater Al-Khayria in the province of Qalioubia. (AFP)
Technical research has shown that installing green roofs on Cairo’s social housing could cut energy demand for cooling by up to 39.7 percent.
Elsewhere in North Africa, similar approaches are taking shape. In Morocco, urban agriculture is reshaping both city edges and historic centers.
According to one study, peri-urban farming in the Casablanca metropolitan area contributes not only to food supply but also to job creation, income generation and cooler microclimates, though it faces challenges such as water scarcity, urban sprawl and fragmented land tenure.
Community gardens in crowded districts also mitigate floods, improve air quality and create multifunctional spaces.
In Fez, the restored Jnan Sbil Gardens — a 19th-century royal park — remain one of the few public green lungs of the medina, offering shade, heritage and community interaction in the heart of the city.
In Morocco, Casa Anfa City, creates a new oasis in Casablanca. (Shutterstock file photo)
Dubai, meanwhile, is positioning itself as a regional testbed for scaling these solutions.
At Expo City’s Jane Goodall Pollinator Garden, the planting strategy follows a “3×3×3” method — three species blooming in spring, three in summer, and three in fall/winter — to ensure year-round food for pollinators.
The palette combines native ghaf, samar, sidr and miswak trees with hardy species like lantana, basil and rosemary. “Pollinator counts more than doubled in areas planted with this mix compared to controls,” Dunn said.
The city’s first City Nature Challenge also showed how even balcony planters can become micro-habitats, logging more than 1,300 observations and 320 species in just four days.
“The lesson is clear: Biodiversity is not confined to reserves or large parks,” said Dunn. “Every courtyard, every balcony planter, every patch of green has a role to play.”
The new International Union for Conservation of Nature fungi center at Terra adds another dimension by demonstrating how mycorrhizal fungi expand root surface area up to 400 times, boosting water and nutrient uptake.
A visitor explores the interior of Terra, the Sustainability Pavilion at the Expo 2020, on October 3, 2021, in Dubai. (AFP)
Dunn said this low-cost, nature-based method “improves survival rates and reduces irrigation” with simple measures such as woodchip mulch and compost teas.
Cooling benefits are equally measurable.
“Greened surfaces can be 20-40 C cooler than bare concrete, lowering surrounding air temperatures by 2-6 C,” said Dunn.
Once established, he added, plants need just 3-7 liters of water per square meter per week with drip or wicking systems, which can even be powered by small solar pumps.
For long-term success, he stressed the importance of shared responsibility, with residents handling light care, NGOs providing training, and professional teams conducting technical checks.
“Policy support matters too — cities should fast-track rooftop permits and incentivize the reuse of condensate or greywater,” he said.
In Ƶ, similar efforts are taking shape under Vision 2030, where small “urban pockets” are being integrated into cityscapes to improve environmental conditions and community well-being.
Under the Green Riyadh Program, more than 7.5 million trees are targeted for planting throughout the city until 2030. (Royal Commission for Riyadh City photo)
These pocket parks, often created in unused lots, rooftops, or courtyards, are already appearing in Riyadh’s retail districts, offering shade, cooling and air purification in one of the world’s hottest climates.
Civil engineer Mohamed Khattab told Arab News that such spaces are “essential components of sustainable city planning,” noting their role in cutting temperatures, improving air quality and fostering healthier, more inclusive urban living.
Dr. Aseel A. Takshe, acting dean of the School of Health Sciences and Psychology at Canadian University Dubai, said the impact of these green spaces ran deeper than aesthetics or comfort.
“Exposure to plants and trees reliably lowers cortisol levels, helping to alleviate the chronic tension that underpins anxiety and depression,” she told Arab News.
Cairo-based organization Schaduf helps city dwellers grow leafy greens in hydroponic rooftop gardens. (Photo courtesy of Schaduf)
Contact with nature, she said, enhances mood, focus, and cognitive function — a counterbalance to the sensory overload of modern cities.
“Community gardens and shared spaces go even further, building networks of mutual support, strengthening resilience, and helping families adapt to challenges such as food insecurity or climate anxiety,” she said.
Building on that psychological perspective, Sheena Khan, head of environmental programs at Terra, underlined that while cities drive progress, they also come with costs.
She pointed to research from Stanford University showing that people living in cities face a 20 percent higher risk of anxiety disorders and a 40 percent higher risk of mood disorders compared to rural residents.
Terra environmental programs chief Sheena Khan says that access to nature in urban places is a must. (LinkedIn: Sheen Khan)
“Physiologically, even 20 minutes in nature lowers cortisol, the body’s stress hormone, providing immediate stress relief,” Khan told Arab News.
According to World Health Organization data, an estimated 1 billion people worldwide live with a mental health disorder, including 14 percent of adolescents.
Khan said the pathways to relief can be both passive and active, whether through tree-lined streets, shaded courtyards and small urban parks, or more immersive practices such as desert meditation or forest bathing.
For the Arab world, home to some of the fastest-growing cities globally, Khan said “this makes access to nature not optional, but essential.”
Israeli demolitions of Palestinian homes ‘raise ethnic cleansing concerns’
Destruction is aimed at permanently clearing the population from Gaza City, Palestinian bank worker says
Updated 20 September 2025
Reuters
GAZA CITY: For a decade, Palestinian bank worker Shady Salama Al-Rayyes paid into a $93,000 mortgage on his flat in a tall, modern block in one of Gaza City’s prime neighborhoods. Now, he and his family are destitute, after fleeing an Israeli demolition strike that collapsed the building in a cloud of black smoke and dust.
The Sept. 5 attack on the 15-story Mushtaha Tower marked the start of an intensified Israeli military demolition campaign targeting high-rise buildings ahead of a ground assault toward the heart of the densely populated city, which started this week.
Over the past two weeks, Israel’s armed forces say they have demolished up to 20 Gaza City tower blocks they say are used by Hamas.
The campaign has made hundreds of people homeless.
I never thought I would leave Gaza City, but the explosions are non-stop. I can’t risk the safety of my children, so I am packing up and will go for the south.
Shady Salama Al-Rayyes, Bank worker
In a similar time frame, Israeli forces have flattened areas in the city’s Zeitoun, Tuffah, Shejaia, and Sheikh Al-Radwan neighborhoods, among others, 10 residents said.
The damage to scores of buildings in Sheikh Al-Radwan since August is visible in satellite imagery reviewed by the news agency.
Al-Rayyes said he feared the destruction was aimed at permanently clearing the population from Gaza City, a view shared by the UN Human Rights Office, or OHCHR.
Its spokesperson, Thameen Al-Kheetan, said in a statement that such a deliberate effort to relocate the population would be tantamount to ethnic cleansing.
“I never thought I would leave Gaza City, but the explosions are non-stop,” Al-Rayyes said.
“I can’t risk the safety of my children, so I am packing up and will leave for the south.”
Al-Rayyes vowed, however, never to leave Gaza entirely.
Israel’s Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said in May that most of Gaza would soon be “totally destroyed” and the population confined to a narrow strip of land near the border with Egypt.
Israel, which has called for all of Gaza City’s civilian residents to leave during the offensive, last week closed a crossing into northern Gaza, further limiting scarce food supplies.
In response to questions for this story, Israel’s military spokesperson Lt-Col. Nadav Shoshani said “there’s no strategy to flatten Gaza.”
The goals of Israel’s military and its politicians are not always aligned, two Israeli security sources said, with one citing ideas such as clearing Palestinians from areas of Gaza for future redevelopment as diverging from military goals.
The offensive is the latest phase in Israel’s war in Gaza.
Before the war, Mushtaha Tower was popular with Gaza City’s professional class and students drawn to its ocean views and convenient location near a public park and two universities.
It originally housed about 50 families, but that number had tripled in recent months as people took in relatives displaced from other parts of Gaza, said Al-Rayyes.
Scores of tents housing more displaced families had spread around the tower’s base. Previous strikes had damaged the upper floors of the building.
On the morning of Sept. 5, a neighbor got a call from an Israeli army officer instructing him to spread the word to evacuate the building within minutes or they were “going to bring it down on our heads,” Al-Rayyes said.
“Panic, fear, confusion, loss, despair, and pain overwhelmed all of us. I saw people running on our bare feet; some didn’t even take their mobile phones or documents. I didn’t take passports or identity cards,” said Al-Rayyes, who had once hoped to pay off his mortgage by this year.
“We carried nothing with us, my wife and my two children, Adam, 9, and Shahd, 11, climbed down the stairs and ran away.”
Video filmed by Reuters shows what happened next. From the air, two projectiles exploded almost simultaneously into the base of the tower, demolishing it in around six seconds.
Dust, smoke, and debris billowed over the streets and tents of displaced people, who scattered, running and screaming.
The UN’s OHCHR said the Israeli military had also not provided evidence to demonstrate that other buildings described as terrorist infrastructure were valid military targets.
Al-Rayyes, who headed the building’s residents’ association, said the tactic of demolition “makes no sense,” even if there was a Hamas presence, which he denied.
“They could have dealt with it in a way that doesn’t even scratch people, not to destroy a 16-floor building,” he said, using a different count of its height.
After a couple of weeks with family in the city’s Sabra district, Al-Rayyes has left, and was setting up a tent in central Gaza’s Deir Al-Balah on Thursday.
In preparation for the ground assault, in recent weeks, up to a dozen homes have been destroyed daily in Zeitoun, Tuffah, and Shejaia, the residents said.
Amjad Al-Shawa, head of the Palestinian Local NGOs Network, estimated that over 65 percent of buildings and homes in Gaza City had been destroyed or heavily damaged during the war.
Extensive damage to suburban areas in recent weeks is visible in satellite images of several neighborhoods.
“The Israeli enemy strike on a vehicle on the Al-Khardali road killed one person,” the health ministry said
Israel has continued to carry out attacks on Lebanon despite the November truce
Updated 19 min 52 sec ago
AFP
BEIRUT: Lebanon said an Israeli strike killed one person in the south on Saturday, the latest deadly attack despite a months-old ceasefire between Israel and the Hezbollah militant group.
An AFP correspondent saw first responders attending the scene in the Marjayoun area, where the partially burnt-out wreckage of a white vehicle sat beside the road.
“The Israeli enemy strike on a vehicle on the Al-Khardali road killed one person,” the health ministry said in a statement.
Israel has continued to carry out attacks on Lebanon despite the November truce that sought to end more than a year of hostilities with the Iran-backed group.
It has also maintained troops in five areas of the south it deems strategic.
The Israeli military has said previous strikes targeted suspected Hezbollah militants or facilities.
On Friday, Israeli strikes killed two people in the south the military said were Hezbollah operatives.
A day earlier, the Israeli military said it struck Hezbollah weapons storage facilities in several areas after urging civilians to flee.
In the face of heavy US pressure and fears of expanded Israeli strikes, the Lebanese government is seeking to disarm Hezbollah.
Foreign Minister Youssef Raggi has said the army will complete the disarmament of its militants in the border area within three months.
The army said Thursday’s strikes took Israeli violations of the ceasefire to 4,500 and warned they risked slowing down Hezbollah’s disarmament.
Hamas warns hostages face fate of missing pilot if Israel assault continues
47 hostages remain in Gaza, including 25 the Israeli military says are dead
The Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades released 46 photographs of hostages on its Telegram channel
Updated 20 September 2025
AFP
GAZA CITY: Hamas’ armed wing published Saturday “farewell” photographs of most of the remaining hostages in Gaza, warning that Israel’s assault on Gaza City could endanger them.
With the images, it evoked the case of an Israeli pilot missing since 1986 after being shot down over Lebanon.
Of the 251 people seized by Palestinian militants during their attack on Israel in October 2023, 47 remain in Gaza, including 25 the Israeli military says are dead.
“Due to (Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu’s obstinacy and (military chief Eyal) Zamir’s submission.... a farewell photograph taken at the start of the operation in Gaza” City, the Brigades wrote alongside the photos.
Israel launched a ground assault on Gaza City on Tuesday, following weeks of heavy air strikes that continue on the territory’s largest urban center.
Hundreds of thousands of residents have fled, while families of hostages have urged the government to halt the offensive, warning it risks the lives of their loved ones still in captivity in Gaza.
The Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades released 46 photographs of hostages on its Telegram channel, each one labelled with the name of Ron Arad, an Israeli air force navigator whose plane went down over southern Lebanon in 1986 during the Lebanese civil war.
Arad was believed to have been initially held by Shiite groups in Lebanon and is now presumed dead, with his remains never returned.
He has been a cause celebre for decades in Israel, where bringing home lost or captured soldiers is considered a national duty.