
Gaza control plan stirs global anger
Israel yesterday announced its decision to take control of Gaza City, triggering swift and widespread criticism from the international community, including Saudi Arabia, China, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the UN's human rights chief. In a strong rebuke, Saudi Arabia's Foreign Ministry posted on X (formerly Twitter), saying Riyadh 'categorically condemns [Israel's] persistence in committing crimes of starvation, brutal practices, and ethnic cleansing against the brotherly Palestinian people.'
In a separate statement, also posted on X, the ministry added that it 'condemns in the strongest and most forceful terms the decision of the Israeli occupation authorities to occupy the Gaza Strip.' Under the newly approved plan by security cabinet, the Israeli army 'will prepare to take control of Gaza City while distributing humanitarian assistance to the civilian population outside combat zones', Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said yesterday.
Before the decision, Netanyahu had said Israel planned to seize complete control of the Gaza Strip, but did not intend to govern the territory where nearly two million people are on the brink of famine.
'We don't want to keep it,' the premier told US network Fox News on Thursday, adding Israel wanted a 'security perimeter' and to hand the Palestinian territory to 'Arab forces that will govern it properly without threatening us'.
Netanyahu's office said a majority of the security cabinet had adopted 'five principles', including demilitarisation of the territory and 'the establishment of an alternative civil administration that is neither Hamas nor the Palestinian Authority'.
Hamas denounced the plan as a 'new war crime', while staunch Israeli ally Germany took the extraordinary step of halting military exports out of concern they could be used in Gaza.
'Under these circumstances, the German government will not authorise any exports of military equipment that could be used in the Gaza Strip until further notice,' German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said.
Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid denounced the cabinet's move as 'a disaster that will lead to many other disasters'. He warned on X that it would result in 'the death of the hostages, the killing of many soldiers, cost Israeli taxpayers tens of billions, and lead to diplomatic bankruptcy'. Gaza residents said they feared for the worst, as they braced for the next onslaught. 'They tell us to go south, then back north, and now they want to send us south again. We are human beings, but no one hears us or sees us,' Maysa al-Shanti, a 52-year-old mother of six, said.

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Daily Tribune
7 hours ago
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Grok, is that Gaza? AI image checks mislocate news photographs
AFP | Paris This image by AFP photojournalist Omar al-Qattaa shows a skeletal, underfed girl in Gaza, where Israel's blockade has fuelled fears of mass famine in the Palestinian territory. But when social media users asked Grok where it came from, X boss Elon Musk's artificial intelligence chatbot was certain that the photograph was taken in Yemen nearly seven years ago. The AI bot's untrue response was widely shared online and a left-wing pro-Palestinian French lawmaker, Aymeric Caron, was accused of peddling disinformation on the Israel-Hamas war for posting the photo. At a time when internet users are turning to AI to verify images more and more, the furore shows the risks of trusting tools like Grok, when the technology is far from error-free. Grok said the photo showed Amal Hussain, a seven-year-old Yemeni child, in October 2018. In fact the photo shows nineyear-old Mariam Dawwas in the arms of her mother Modallala in Gaza City on August 2, 2025. Before the war, sparked by Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, Mariam weighed 25 kilograms, her mother told AFP. Today, she weighs only nine. The only nutrition she gets to help her condition is milk, Modallala told AFP -- and even that's "not always available". Challenged on its incorrect response, Grok said: "I do not spread fake news; I base my answers on verified sources." The chatbot eventually issued a response that recognised the error -- but in reply to further queries the next day, Grok repeated its claim that the photo was from Yemen. The chatbot has previously issued content that praised Nazi leader Adolf Hitler and that suggested people with Jewish surnames were more likely to spread online hate. Radical right bias Grok's mistakes illustrate the limits of AI tools, whose functions are as impenetrable as "black boxes", said Louis de Diesbach, a researcher in technological ethics. "We don't know exactly why they give this or that reply, nor how they prioritise their sources," said Diesbach, author of a book on AI tools, "Hello ChatGPT". Each AI has biases linked to the information it was trained on and the instructions of its creators, he said. In the researcher's view Grok, made by Musk's xAI start-up, shows "highly pronounced biases which are highly aligned with the ideology" of the South African billionaire, a former confidante of US President Donald Trump and a standard-bearer for the radical right. Asking a chatbot to pinpoint a photo's origin takes it out of its proper role, said Diesbach. "Typically, when you look for the origin of an image, it might say: 'This photo could have been taken in Yemen, could have been taken in Gaza, could have been taken in pretty much any country where there is famine'." AI does not necessarily seek accuracy -- "that's not the goal," the expert said. Another AFP photograph of a starving Gazan child by al-Qattaa, taken in July 2025, had already been wrongly located and dated by Grok to Yemen, 2016. That error led to internet users accusing the French newspaper Liberation, which had published the photo, of manipulation. 'Friendly pathological liar' An AI's bias is linked to the data it is fed and what happens during fine-tuning -- the socalled alignment phase -- which then determines what the model would rate as a good or bad answer. "Just because you explain to it that the answer's wrong doesn't mean it will then give a different one," Diesbach said. "Its training data has not changed and neither has its alignment." Grok is not alone in wrongly identifying images. When AFP asked Mistral AI's Le Chat -- which is in part trained on AFP's articles under an agreement between the French start-up and the news agency -- the bot also misidentified the photo of Mariam Dawwas as being from Yemen. For Diesbach, chatbots must never be used as tools to verify facts. "They are not made to tell the truth," but to "generate content, whether true or false", he said.


Daily Tribune
a day ago
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Joint Statement by Bahrain and 23 Arab-Islamic States Condemns Israeli Military Actions in Gaza
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Gulf Insider
a day ago
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Germany Halts Arms Exports To Israel As World Reacts To Gaza Conquest Plan
Netanyahu's security cabinet has approved a plan to takeover the whole of the Gaza Strip, including intense operations in Gaza city, resulting in outrage among some European capitals, who see this as doubling down on the carnage which has left over 60,000 Palestinians dead, based on Gaza health sources. Germany has announced itself as the latest European nation to suspend its arms exports to Israel, noting that these could be used in human rights violations and potential war crimes in the Gaza Strip. Berlin backs the anti-Hamas fight, however. Chancellor Friedrich Merz made clear as Israel's military is poised to take over Gaza city his government will not approve or transfer any exports of military equipment to Israel that could be used in Gaza until further notice. Merz says it was 'increasingly difficult to understand' how the Israeli military plan could achieve its war aims in a legitimate way, adding: 'Under these circumstances, the German government will not authorise any exports of military equipment that could be used in the Gaza Strip until further notice.' The German arms industry has historically been among the globe's largest arms suppliers to Israel. Of course, the US has long been far and away the biggist supplier of arms, and under Trump this doesn't look to cease – with Germany coming in second, according to global monitors, over the last half-decade. 'Israel has the right to defend itself against the terror of Hamas,' Merz continued in his statement. 'The release of the hostages and determined negotiations on a ceasefire are our top priority. The disarmament of Hamas is essential. Hamas must not play a role in the future of Gaza.' But apparently Merz vehemently disagress with the practical how in terms of the methods whereby this is accomplished. Global critics have said Israel is conducting ethnic cleansing and ultimately plans to annex the strip. PM Netanyahu has sought to deflect this criticism by saying Israel will conquer the whole enclave, but that it doesn't ultimatley want to govern it. This vaguely suggests it could be handed over to an entity like the Palestinian Authority (PA) one day, but likely this would be done (or not done at all) by a future Israeli government. Shekel Falls After Cabinet Approves Plan to Seize Gaza City–Bloomberg Meanwhile other major powers like China are raising the alarm over Israel's takeover plan, with China on Friday expressing 'serious concerns' over the move on Gaza City, urging it to 'immediately cease its dangerous actions.' 'Gaza belongs to the Palestinian people and is an inseparable part of Palestinian territory,' a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson told the AFP. 'The correct way to ease the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and to secure the release of hostages is an immediate ceasefire.' 'A complete resolution to the Gaza conflict hinges on a ceasefire; only then can a path to de-escalation be paved and regional security ensured,' the Chinese government statement said. Beijing is 'willing to work together with the international community to help end the fighting in Gaza as soon as possible,' it added.