Trump Acknowledges Mass Hunger Crisis in Gaza During Summit With Starmer

Welcome again to World Brief, where we are looking at evidence of collective hunger in Gazaand Thailand The ceasefire deal with CambodiaAnd possible problems in US European Union Commercial framework.
“These children look very hungry”
US president Donald Trump often chant Israeli dialogue points related to Bajbah, which raises the frustration of European countries, which has become increasingly disappointed with the Israeli war against Hamas. But on Monday, Trump seemed to break this pattern by publicly disagreement about Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that collective hunger in Gaza is exaggerated.
Welcome again to World Brief, where we are looking at evidence of collective hunger in Gazaand Thailand The ceasefire deal with CambodiaAnd possible problems in US European Union Commercial framework.
“These children look very hungry”
US President Donald Trump often chant Israeli dialogue points related to Bajbah, which raises the frustration of European countries, which has become increasingly disappointed with the Israeli war against Hamas. But on Monday, Trump seemed to break this pattern by publicly disagreement about Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that collective hunger in Gaza is exaggerated.
“We have to feed the children,” Trump said during his meeting with British Prime Minister Kiir Starmer in Scotland on Monday.
Since the Israel-Hamas war began in October 2023, more than 130 Palestinians have died due to malnutrition, the majority of children and a large part of them died during the past month, according to the Ministry of Health in Gaza. More than 1,000 others have been killed by Israeli forces in recent weeks while trying to reach food. “It is a humanitarian crisis,” Starmer said on Monday. “I think people in Britain revolve around what they see on their screens.”
On Sunday, Israel announced a temporary suspension of 10 hours to military operations through parts of Gaza to allow Jordan and the United Arab Emirates to drop food and other humanitarian supplies in the region. But rights groups have argued that air aid drops are not a substitute for land crossings, which Israel is still largely confined. Foreign powers have demanded that the United States take over a greater role to help address collective hunger reports, which have proposed some former Israeli officials and non -profit organizations that are now taking a point in Israel to evidence of Israel committing genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza.
Dozens of United Nations foreign ministers met on Monday to discuss support for the two -state solution and work to establish a Palestinian state. In his opening statements, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres appealed to the participants not to allow the meeting to be “another exercise in a goodwill speech,” saying that “it can be a decisive turning point-which stimulates the irreversible progress towards ending the occupation.” Indeed, France has pledged to recognize a Palestinian state starting in September.
But with the boycott of Israel and the United States that crossed on Monday – which was postponed in June after Israel launched attacks on Iran – it worries the experience that the concrete progress still seems far away. Instead, French Foreign Minister Jean -Nouil Barrot stressed that a discussion on Monday aims to provide a “political horizon” for future peace talks, as the attendees admit that the solution of a state that will not happen will not happen amid a continuous war in Gaza and the current leadership of Israel, which refuses to create an independent guard.
Although the Israel-Hamas war proved to be the highest element in the agenda agenda during Trump’s Trump talks on Monday, the two leaders also dismantled some commercial concerns. That is, Trump and Sarmer expressed his interest in resuming negotiations to address the American definitions on British and aluminum steel, which remains 25 percent despite the trade framework of the United States of America agreed in May. Trump warned on Monday that he would impose a new tariff ranging between 15 and 20 percent, starting from Friday, on countries that have not reached an agreement with Washington; He did not mention the countries that will affect them, and instead described the definitions as “the world.”
Trump and Sarmer also expressed his frustration with Russian President Vladimir Putin, accusing him of being a driving force for the lack of a ceasefire with Ukraine. In an attempt to force Putin at the negotiating table, Trump on Monday shortened the deadline for 50 days for Moscow, saying that Russia now has 10 or 12 days instead of early September to make peace with Kiev or face a new round of sanctions.
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The world this week
Tuesday, July 29: German Chancellor Friedrich Mirz hosts Jordan King Abdullah II in Berlin.
Wednesday, July 30: The Supreme Court in Thailand spent whether former Thai Prime Minister Thaxin Shinwatra spent time in prison while he was transferred to the hospital in 2023-2024.
Thursday, July 31: US Secretary of State Marco Rubio hosts South Korean Foreign Minister Chu Hyun in Washington.
The state of emergency in Myanmar, which was imposed for the first time after the country’s military coup in February 2021.
Sunday Aug 3: Eight OPEC members+ a virtual meeting.
What we are following
The armistice deal. Thailand and Cambodia agreed to the “immediate and unconditional” ceasefire starting on Monday in the middle of the night, which ended some of the most intense fighting between neighbors for more than a decade. “This is a first vital step towards canceling the escalation and restoring peace and security,” said Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, standing next to Thai and Kambodian leaders.
Malaysia, as president of the Association of Southeast Asian countries, mediated in a dialogue more than two hours between the two sides, amid pressure from the United States that it will not force trade deals with Thailand and Cambodia until the conflict resolves. Bangkok initially pushed the third -party involvement, on the pretext that direct bilateral negotiations were not exhausted.
Armed attacks caught last week along the 510 miles of the two countries after the mines exploded on Wednesday, who was wounded by five Thai soldiers. Over the next five days, dozens of people (most of them civilians) have been killed, and more than 300,000 others were displaced from both sides, with strikes that were struck by the Temple Vihear Temple, a UNESCO World Heritage site in Cambodia, as well as other civilian infrastructure. The attacks escalated a diplomatic conflict largely that broke out in late May by killing a Kamboudi soldier, who blaming both sides.
Refreshment trade tensions. Two European Union officials recognized Politico On Monday, the bloc does not have the ability to invest $ 600 billion in the United States, just hours after pledge to carry out as part of a prominent trade agreement with Washington. This framework, which was signed on Sunday, will impose a 15 percent tariff in most European commodities-on Jeff, the average that Trump originally threatened to impose-and gives priority to the largest investments in American energy and military infrastructure, which experts hope to avoid a comprehensive trade war between the largest economies in the world.
“It is a very strong deal, it is a very big deal, it’s the largest of all deals,” Trump said on Sunday along with European Commission President Ursula von der Layen, who was also called a “good deal”.
However, it is expected that the $ 600 billion, which the European Union pledged at first to invest exclusively from the private sector, which is not enjoyed by Brussels, instead of taxpayers. The European Commission did not mention whether it would provide incentives to encourage private companies to achieve this goal.
Meanwhile, US Treasury Secretary, Scott Beesen, resumed trade talks with senior Chinese officials in Stockholm on Monday. Negotists aim to unify a new agreement before August 12, and the time that Trump threatened to form high tariff prices if progress is not made. The 90 -day armistice agreement was on the verge of completion in mid -May to reduce the minimum tariffs in Washington of 145 percent and the minimum revenge rate in Beijing of 125 percent.
Instability in the eastern Congo. The rebels with the allied democratic power (ADF) opened fire on the invitees in a Catholic Church in the Democratic Republic of the Congo on Sunday, killing about 40 people. Five other people were killed in an attack on a nearby village. ADF is supported by the Islamic State and is known to target civilians in the eastern Congo as well as across the border in Uganda.
The Eastern Congolese, rich in minerals, has suffered in recent months between the Congolese forces and the M23 group supported by Rwanda, and some experts indicate that ADF has benefited from these turmoil and the emptiness of the subsequent force to enhance its goals and avoid international attention.
According to the Congolese army, the “massive massacre” was on Sunday in retaliation for the recent security operations targeting ADF. However, M23 officials have benefited from the attack to accuse Kinshasa from “bright efficiency” in her ability to protect the population. Meanwhile, the United Nations Peacekeeping Forces warned that the church’s attack “would exacerbate the very disturbing humanitarian situation in the province.”
Difficulties end
Congratulations for the Margo, which is the structure game (alongside its owner, Carl Barnes) won the Dogs Championships in the UK in Dorst on Sunday. Some may argue that humans put more work, and what they wander with them through the waves while the dogs simply rode the bow in a step closer to the children of “Aura Farming” in Indona. But do not make mistakes: it is difficult to balance four legs when there is a crowd of people.
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2025-07-28 21:20:00