Trump sees 'real starvation' in Gaza, despite Israeli claims, and vows to step up aid
Trump sees 'real starvation' in Gaza, despite Israeli claims, and vows to step up aid

Trump sees ‘real starvation’ in Gaza, despite Israeli claims, and vows to step up aid

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Diverging Reports Breakdown

Trump breaks with Israel, acknowledges famine in Gaza and promises aid

President Donald Trump said he will work with U.S. allies in Europe to provide aid to starving Palestinians in Gaza. The move represents a break from ally Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s stance on the issue. Netanyahu continues to maintain there is “no starvation in Gaza” despite the images and videos coming out of the region and international concern over the situation. The United Nations warned of “catastrophic hunger” in Gaza over the weekend. The deteriorating situation in Gaza continues to make headlines around the world, including international news outlets, which are urging Israel to let reporters and aid in. The conflict itself has been going on since October 2023, when Hamas militants attacked an Israeli music festival and took hostages.“Seeing those images of starving children in particular, are revolting,” U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer said.

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President Donald Trump said he will work with American allies in Europe to provide aid to starving Palestinians in Gaza. The move represents a break from ally Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s stance on the issue.

Aid to Gaza

The president’s comments came during a meeting with U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer at Trump’s golf resort in Scotland. Trump said the starvation issue in Gaza is one of the main reasons he met with Starmer.

“We’re going to set up food centers and we’re going to do it in conjunction with some very good people and we’re going to supply funds, and we just took in trillions of dollars,” Trump said. “We got a lot of money and we’re going to spend a little money on some food.”

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Specific details of the plan to establish those food centers remain unclear.

Starmer echoed Trump’s thoughts on the situation during the meeting.

“Seeing those images of starving children in particular, are revolting and there’s a sense of revulsion in the British public at what they’re seeing, and they know and we know that humanitarian aid needs to get in at speed, at volume,” Starmer said.

Trump continued to dismiss the idea of recognizing Palestine as a state.

Breaking from Israel

Trump and Netanyahu have remained close allies since Trump entered politics a decade ago; however, the two world leaders are now on opposing sides of this issue.

Netanyahu continues to maintain there is “no starvation in Gaza” despite the images and videos coming out of the region and international concern over the situation. Over the weekend, the United Nations warned of “catastrophic hunger” in Gaza.

The Israeli government and its allies say food insecurity is “a heartbreaking reminder of the horrors of war.”

Trump was asked what he would say to Netanyahu the next time they speak.

“I’m going to say, ‘look, we’re giving money and we’re giving food, but we’re over here and we are over in the United States,’” Trump said. “I think I can speak for the Prime Minister. We’re giving money and things. He’s got to sort of like run it. Well, I want them to make sure they get the food. I want to make sure they get the food, every ounce of food.”

Starvation in Gaza

The deteriorating situation in Gaza continues to make headlines around the world, including international news outlets, which are urging Israel to let reporters and aid in.

Israel recently announced it would let humanitarian aid airdrops continue in Gaza, and the World Central Kitchen restarted operations there last week.

That comes after dozens of children and adults starved to death this month, according to a report from the Associated Press.

Both Trump and Starmer referenced the hostages still being held by Hamas when talking about the ongoing conflict.

The conflict itself has been going on since October 2023, when Hamas militants attacked an Israeli music festival and took hostages.

“Israel has a lot of responsibility. They’re hampered by the fact that you still have 20 hostages or so,” Trump said. “And the people of Israel are very concerned about the 20 hostages. It’s very interesting. You could say they could be more concerned about retribution than the 20 hostages. But they really want the 20 hostages to survive.”

Source: San.com | View original article

Eagles Mere Friends of the Arts; Barbara Sonies; July 28 2025

The Eagles Mere Chamber Players will present a concert on August 1, 2025. The performance will include pieces by Haydn, Mozart, Dvorak, Piazzola, Barber and more.

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Barbara Sonies, violinist with the Philadelphia Trio and

co-director of Music in the Mountains with cellist

Deborah Reeder, speaking about the history of the

summer chamber music workshop in Eagles Mere, PA,

and about the Eagles Mere Chamber Players, alumnae

of Music in the Mountains. The Chamber Players will

present a concert on Friday, August 1, 2025, at the

David Dewire Center at 8 pm, as part of the 50th

Anniversary Season of the Eagles Mere Friends

of the Arts.

The performance will include pieces by Haydn,

Mozart, Dvorak, Piazzola, Barber and more.

For information: www.emfoa.org/

Source: Wvia.org | View original article

Trump sees ‘real starvation’ in Gaza, despite Israeli claims, and vows to step up aid

Trump sees ‘real starvation’ in Gaza, despite Israeli claims, and vows to step up aid. U.N. says a third of Gaza’s population of about 2 million go for days without eating. Hundreds of thousands of people there live in “famine-like conditions” The World Health Organization said on Sunday there had been a “marked spike” in malnutrition-related deaths in Gaza: 63 in July, including 25 children.”Some of those kids are — that’s real starvation stuff. I see it, and you can’t fake that. So we’re going to be even more involved,” Trump says.

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Trump sees ‘real starvation’ in Gaza, despite Israeli claims, and vows to step up aid

toggle caption Jane Barlow/AP

President Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer discussed doing more to feed the starving population in the Gaza Strip on Monday, as an international outcry mounted over the rising number of people dying of hunger in the besieged Palestinian enclave.

Trump’s comments during a visit to Scotland were at odds with his close ally, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who on Sunday claimed that “there is no starvation in Gaza.”

The United Nations’ World Food Programme says a third of Gaza’s population of about 2 million go for days without eating, as hundreds of thousands of people there live in “famine-like conditions.” The World Health Organization said on Sunday there had been a “marked spike” in malnutrition-related deaths in Gaza: 63 in July, including 25 children.

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Asked by reporters whether he agreed with Netanyahu’s assessment about a lack of starvation, Trump said: “I don’t know. I mean, based on television, I would say not particularly, because those children look very hungry. But we’re giving a lot of money and a lot of food, and other nations are now stepping up.”

Trump later said, “Some of those kids are — that’s real starvation stuff. I see it, and you can’t fake that. So we’re going to be even more involved.”

Starmer said the “situation on the ground in Gaza is absolutely intolerable.” He said for the British public, “those images of starving children in particular are revolting.”

The humanitarian crisis has deepened after nearly 22 months of war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, which began with a deadly Hamas-led attack in Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

After growing international criticism over Israel’s restrictions on the flow of humanitarian aid in Gaza, the Israeli military said Sunday it would begin to pause fighting for 10 hours a day in Gaza’s population centers to allow more food aid, including airdrops, into the enclave.

Trump said “it’s very difficult to deal with Hamas,” the militant and political organization that runs Gaza. Hamas and other fighters in Gaza are believed to hold 22 living hostages and the bodies of 28 deceased hostages taken in its Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

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But Trump also said “Israel has a lot of responsibility” for the limited food aid in Gaza, and said he wanted Netanyahu to “make sure they get the food.”

He said the U.S. with the help of European countries would set up “food centers” with no barriers or fences, so people could go and get what they need. He did not elaborate on the plan.

NPR’s Franco Ordoñez contributed reporting from Turnberry, Scotland, and Lauren Frayer contributed from Aberdeen.

Source: Npr.org | View original article

‘You can’t fake that’: Trump sees ‘real starvation’ in Gaza, says Israel must do more

US President Donald Trump says he is “not particularly convinced” by Israel’s assurances that there is no starvation in Gaza. He later asserted there was “real starvation” in the Strip, adding: “You can’t fake that” His comments came amid global condemnations of Israel for the humanitarian situation in the enclave. Images circulated last week of emaciated children in the war-torn territory. Israel has said there isNo widespread famine in Gaza, asserting that the photos are of isolated cases or are misleading, but started yesterday to pause all fighting in large swathes of the Strip for 10 hours each day. Israel relied heavily on the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation between March and May to avoid aid being diverted for subsequent distribution. However, GHF sites have seen near-daily incidents in which IDF troops have shot at Gazans, in what the military has presented as deadly crowd control incidents. Hamas has refused to agree to a permanent ceasefire unless it is disarmed and exiled, while Israel says the death toll is exaggerated.

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US President Donald Trump said Monday that he is “not particularly convinced” by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s assurance that there is no starvation in Gaza, and later asserted there was “real starvation” in the Strip, adding: “You can’t fake that.”

Trump’s comments, along with promises to set up “food centers” in the Strip, came amid global condemnations of Israel for the humanitarian situation in the enclave, after images circulated last week of emaciated children in the war-torn territory.

Israel has said there is no widespread famine in Gaza, asserting that the photos are of isolated cases or are misleading, but started yesterday to pause all fighting in large swathes of the Strip for 10 hours each day, while facilitating a surge of aid by land and air.

Taking questions from reporters at his golf resort in Scotland, Trump was asked whether he was convinced by the Israeli premier’s insistence that “there is no starvation in Gaza.”

“Based on television, I would say not particularly, because those children look very hungry,” he said, standing alongside British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and wife Victoria, ahead of a meeting between the two leaders.

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Starmer was far more forceful: “I think people in Britain are revolted at seeing what they are seeing on their screens,” he said, though he also said that Hamas can play no part in any future Palestinian government.

Starmer, who is facing domestic pressure to follow France in declaring that the UK will recognize a Palestinian state, described the humanitarian situation in Gaza as “absolutely intolerable.”

“We need to galvanize other countries in support of getting that aid in, and, yes, that does involve putting pressure on Israel, because it absolutely is a humanitarian catastrophe,” he said.

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Asked whether there was more Israel could do, Trump said as well: “I think Israel can do a lot.” He added that, when next speaking to Netanyahu, he would tell him “I want him to make sure they get the food. I want to make sure they get the food, every ounce of food.”

The US president bemoaned Hamas’s commandeering of much of the aid that has gone into the Strip, saying: “We’ve given a lot of money to Gaza for food and everything else. A lot of that money is stolen by Hamas, and a lot of the food is stolen.”

Trump: ‘That’s real starvation, I see it. You can’t fake that’

Later, after his meeting with Starmer, Trump said: “The United States will be helping with food. We can save a lot of people. I mean, some of those kids are — that’s real starvation stuff, I see it. You can’t fake that. So we’re going to be even more involved.”

The president said the US would “set up food centers, and we’re going to do it in conjunction with some very good people,” together with the UK and “all of the European nations, joining us.”

Trump said the new “food centers” would have “no boundaries,” and people will be able to just “walk in.”

“We’re not going to have fences where they see the food from 30 yards away, and they see the food, it’s all there, but nobody’s at it because they have fences set up, that no one can even get it. It’s crazy what’s going on over there,” he said of the current situation.

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After blocking all aid from entering the Strip between March and May, Israel relied heavily on the US- and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which was created to avoid aid being diverted to Hamas, for subsequent distribution.

However, GHF sites have seen near-daily incidents in which IDF troops have shot at Gazans, in what the military has presented as deadly crowd control incidents. The Hamas-run Gaza health ministry says more than 1,000 people have been killed near the GHF sites, though Israel says the toll is exaggerated.

Trump also addressed the failure of negotiations between Israel and Hamas to reach a temporary ceasefire and release of some of the hostages.

Netanyahu repeatedly has said that Israel will only end the war if Hamas is disarmed and exiled, while Hamas has refused to agree to a third ceasefire and hostage release unless it leads to a permanent end of the war — presumably with the group returning to power as the Strip’s de facto government.

Trump: Hamas ‘don’t want to give hostages’

Trump said that Hamas does not want a ceasefire deal, and, as a result, Israel must fight differently in Gaza.

“They have totally changed now,” he said of Hamas. “They don’t want to give hostages.”

Trump said that the Hamas representatives “were really unwilling to talk” during recent negotiations in Doha, and asserted that Iran had “interjected themselves” in the talks.

“I think they got involved in this negotiation, telling Hamas and giving Hamas signals and orders. And that’s not good,” he said.

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“We got a tremendous amount of hostages out. But it would take place in drips and drabs,” Trump said, referring to the previous two hostage-ceasefire deals.

“But I always said when you come when you get down to the final 10 or 20, you’re not going to be able to make a deal with these people because they use them as a shield. And when they give them up, they no longer have a shield,” he said.

Twenty hostages held by terror groups in Gaza are believed to still be alive, along with the bodies of 28 hostages who have been confirmed dead, and two hostages about whom Israel has expressed “grave concern.”

“Now, possibly, the fight will have to be a little bit different,” he said, adding that he told Netanyahu, “You’re going to have to now maybe do it a different way,” and that the two leaders were discussing “various plans.”

“If they didn’t have the hostages, things would go very quickly, but they do. And we know where they have them in some cases. And you don’t want to go riding roughshod over that area because that means those hostages will be killed,” Trump told reporters.

Israel started operations in Deir al-Balah, in the central Gaza Strip, earlier this month, after avoiding the area for the first 20 months of the war, due to concerns that hostages were being held there.

“Now, there are some people that would say, ‘Well, that’s the price you pay.’ But we don’t like to say that. We don’t want to say that. And I don’t think the people of Israel want to say that either, which is pretty amazing,” Trump said.

Trump’s comments were echoed by US Vice President JD Vance, who told reporters: “I don’t know if you’ve all seen these images. You have got some really, really heartbreaking cases. You’ve got little kids who are clearly starving to death.”

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“Israel’s got to do more to let that aid in,” he stressed. “And we’ve also got to wage war on Hamas so that those folks stop preventing food from coming into this territory.”

Vance said the US wants to make sure Palestinian civilians in Gaza get food, while adding that it also wants to ensure that Hamas “gets the hell out of Gaza.”

Israel’s negotiators in ‘constant contact’ with mediators

Despite the apparent break down in hostage talks, an official in the Prime Minister’s Office told The Times of Israel on Monday that Israel’s hostage negotiating team remained “constant contact” with Egypt and Qatar, which are in touch with Hamas.

A diplomat based in the Gulf, meanwhile, told Haaretz that Hamas surprised Israel and the mediators by demanding the release of 30 Palestinian prisoners serving life sentences for each of the living Israeli hostages, instead of 20.

Israel released 30 lifers and 20 other Palestinian prisoners in January to free five Israeli female surveillance soldiers.

“It’s not over yet, and it hasn’t blown up,” the diplomat said, referring to talks between Israel and Hamas.

Israel recalled its negotiating team for consultations after Hamas gave its answer to a Qatari ceasefire proposal on Thursday.

At the same time, an Israeli team has been in Cairo for the last two weeks, discussing the humanitarian aid influx into Gaza that started in recent days, an Egyptian diplomat told The Times of Israel.

Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi issued an impassioned call on Monday for Trump to intervene to put an end to the fighting in Gaza, saying, “The time has come to end the war.”

In a video address, Sissi said Trump “is the one capable of stopping the war, bringing in aid, and ending this suffering.”

“Therefore, I am making a special appeal to His Excellency President Trump: Please make every effort to stop the war and bring in aid.”

Germany declines to take steps against Israel, for now

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said Monday, after a meeting of his security cabinet, that there was no decision to take any measures against Israel, after his office previously said Berlin was ready to ramp up pressure over the humanitarian situation in Gaza.

“For now, we want to await the foreign minister’s trip and the talks that will be held with the Israeli government in the coming days,” he said. “However, we reserve the right to take such steps.“

German FM Johann Wadephul is slated to be in Israel on Thursday.

Merz did say, however, that Germany would organize an airlift of humanitarian aid to the Strip, adding that Berlin will work with Paris and London on the initiative.

Israel, Jordan, and the United Arab Emirates have airdropped aid to Gaza in recent days, and Spain has said it plans to do so later this week.

Yair Lapid: Israel could face sanctions over Gaza ‘disaster’

In Israel, too, the government came under denunciation for its handling of the war.

Opposition Leader Yair Lapid told reporters at a Tel Aviv press conference that Netanyahu’s government has “failed in the war in Gaza,” stating that his assessment is based on “intelligence and operational information” shared with him by virtue of his position.

“It’s a total disaster. This is a strategic failure which is leading to an operational and political failure,” he said, adding that “the Israeli government no longer knows why soldiers continue to die in Gaza.”

If the war is not ended immediately, the hostages would not return home, Israeli soldiers would continue to be killed, and the “humanitarian disaster” in Gaza would get even worse, he warned.

Lapid insisted that there is an alternative, however, calling for a comprehensive hostage deal, after which Israeli forces would withdraw from Gaza and continue the “work of eliminating Hamas” from the perimeter of the Palestinian enclave.

Civil governance would be taken over by “a coalition of moderate Arab countries led by Egypt,” he added.

“Only the Netanyahu government refuses to discuss the question of how the war will end. It has not presented any plan, any political vision. A government that is not even willing to mobilize the ultra-Orthodox is a government that does not really want to win and cannot really win.”

Turning to the humanitarian situation, Lapid insists that “the management of humanitarian aid in Gaza has collapsed” and that Israel “needs to make sure that there is no hunger in Gaza,” both out of pragmatic considerations and because such a policy is in line with Jewish values.

Lapid warns that “economic and legal sanctions” against Israel could be implemented, while anybody who fought “will have to hope that they are not arrested the moment they leave Israel’s borders.”

The war in Gaza began on October 7, 2023, when thousands of Hamas-led terrorists invaded southern Israel, killing some 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages. Terror groups in the Gaza Strip are still holding 50 hostages, including 49 of the 251 abducted by Hamas-led terrorists on October 7, 2023.

They include the bodies of at least 28 confirmed dead by the IDF. Twenty are believed to be alive and there are grave concerns for the well-being of two others, Israeli officials have said. Hamas is also holding the body of an IDF soldier who was killed in Gaza in 2014.

Sam Sokol contributed to this report.

Source: Timesofisrael.com | View original article

Live updates: Israel pauses some Gaza fighting as trickle of aid reaches starving Palestinians

Jordan and the United Arab Emirates carried out their first airdrops into Gaza over the weekend. Many say having no choice but to chase after aid is an insult to their dignity. One man said he managed to collect some flour, but that it would not be enough to feed his family of eight. Others were grateful to receive food, but said the method of airdroping aid only risked more violence.“We’d rather die of hunger with dignity than die in humiliation and filth,” said Ahmad Faiz Fayyad.

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Humanitarian aid supplies are airdropped by military cargo planes over the western part of Deir al-Balah, Gaza, on Monday. Anadolu/Getty Images

In the central Gazan town of Al-Zawayda, scores of Palestinians rushed to collect boxes of aid that were dropped from the sky on Monday.

For many, the food in these boxes will be the only meal they eat today. But many say that having no choice but to chase after airdropped aid is an insult to their dignity.

“This aid is disgraceful. We are not dogs to be made to run after aid,” Ahmad Faiz Fayyad told CNN. “We’d rather die of hunger with dignity than die in humiliation and filth.”

Jordan and the United Arab Emirates carried out their first airdrops into Gaza over the weekend, attempting to combat starvation in the enclave caused by Israel’s blockade.

“The people doing this have no shame,” said Fayyad. “We want the aid to come in by land and be distributed through institutions, so that people can receive it with dignity and honor.”

Fayyad said he did not collect any aid and did not want to, while dozens of others scrambled to reach the UAE Red Crescent-marked boxes. As a crowd of people picked up the boxes from the ground, gunshots rang out, causing many to panic and flee, CNN video showed.

One man said he managed to collect some flour, but that it would not be enough to feed his family of eight. Another elderly woman said she hadn’t managed to reach the food because she was almost crushed in the crowd.

Others were grateful to receive food, but said the method of airdropping aid only risked more violence.

“I took this box, thank God. It will help ease the hunger we’re facing. Praise be to God and thank you to everyone who helped us,” Mohammad Al-Bara’a told CNN.

“This is enough for us, but you can see and hear what’s happening—people are fighting to the death over aid. There are no words to describe what you’re seeing.”

The United Nations has warned that airdropping aid into Gaza is “very, very expensive” and often dangerous.

“Why use airdrops when you can drive hundreds of trucks through the borders,” Juliette Touma, a spokesperson for the main UN agency for Palestinian refugees, told CNN last week. “It’s much easier, more effective, faster, cheaper and safer.”

Source: Cnn.com | View original article

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