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Trump’s Gaza relocation proposal sparks heated debate among Palestinians: ‘no life left here’

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President Donald Trump’s suggestion that Palestinians should leave Gaza to rebuild their lives after months of war has triggered a wave of reactions, exposing deep divisions within the enclave and across the Arab world.

Speaking alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House last week, Trump outlined his vision for Gaza’s future, describing it as «the Riviera of the Middle East.» His proposal to relocate 1.8 million Palestinians sparked outrage among Palestinian leaders and drew mixed reactions from Gazans.

While some Gazans have rejected emigration, others see it as their only hope.

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«I’m asking Donald Trump himself to relocate us as he suggested. And I’ll be the first one to go,» one young man told the Center for Peace Communications team in Gaza during a camera interview. The man described his bleak reality, saying, «I want to leave because there’s no life left here. Life here is gone. I mean, just look around you.»

THE HISTORY OF GAZA AMID TRUMP’S PLAN TO REBUILD ENCLAVE

A view of the widespread destruction in Gaza, Jabalia, on February 5, 2025.  (YOUSSEF ALZANOUN/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)

Another Gazan called on neighboring Arab countries to provide an escape route. «To our brotherly Egyptian and Jordanian people and King Abdullah—we hope they open the crossing for the youth who are leaving, for the wounded, for the sick, and the elderly who need treatment.»

Jordan’s King Abdullah is set to meet with President Trump on Tuesday, having rejected his plan for annexing Gaza and displacing Palestinians, Reuters reported.

Jordanian King Abdullah meets President Trump on Tuesday having already rejected his plan for Gaza.   (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

Jordanian King Abdullah meets President Trump on Tuesday having already rejected his plan for Gaza.   (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer) (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

The Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research poll conducted before the October 7 terror attacks found that 31% of Gazans were already considering emigration—44% among young people. The most popular countries were Turkey, followed by Germany, Canada, the United States and Qatar.

The poll’s authors said, «The main drivers seem economic, political, educational, security and concerns about corruption.»

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Palestinians flee Rafah

Displaced Palestinians arrive in central Gaza after fleeing from the southern Gaza city of Rafah on Thursday, May 9, 2024. (AP/Abdel Kareem Hana)

Joseph Braude, founder and president of the Center for Peace Communications, told Fox News Digital that the number has grown significantly due to the ongoing devastation. «Through our daily contact with Gazans from all walks of life across the coastal strip, we have seen that proportion grow, amid the destruction of the present war, to a substantial majority of the population.»

Ayman Khaled, a Palestinian journalist, echoed similar sentiments, pointing to the grim prospects for rebuilding Gaza after months of relentless Israeli bombardment. «Gaza will need to go through a very long period of reconstruction. In that long period of time, where will the youth go? Where will the wounded go? We have more than 100,000 wounded. Even before the last war, a stream of people were leaving Gaza—workers, students, business people. That’s how it looked then. Now, those trends will double. There is no hope for the reconstruction of Gaza, not in a year nor 10 nor 15.»

‘LEVEL IT’: TRUMP SAYS US WILL ‘TAKE OVER’ GAZA STRIP, REBUILD IT TO STABILIZE MIDDLE EAST

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Donald Trump sit in the Oval Office

U.S. President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meet at the White House in Washington, D.C., Feb. 4, 2025. (REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz)

He also warned that as long as Hamas remains in power, cycles of violence will continue, pushing more people to flee. «If Hamas remains on the scene, this will keep happening. Every day, we’ll have new killings. After every battle, they say they are victorious—but what is this victory? If we don’t seriously address the issue of Hamas leaving the political scene, we cannot talk about anything else. If Hamas remains, people will emigrate, whether willingly or unwillingly.»

Hamas described Trump’s plan as a «recipe for creating chaos and tension in the region,» and for many Gazans, leaving is unthinkable. Speaking to The Associated Press, Mustafa al-Gazzar, a displaced Gazan, dismissed the idea of leaving. «You think you’ll expel me abroad and bring other people in my place? I would rather live in my tent, under rubble. I won’t leave. Put that in your brain.»

Amna Omar, 71, who has been sheltering in central Gaza, was equally defiant. «Gaza is our land, our home. We as Gazans… I don’t want to die in Egypt.»

Another woman in Deir al-Balah told Israeli news agency TPS-IL, «We clung to our destroyed homes and we clung to the soil of Palestine.» While voluntary emigration has been quietly discussed for years, Trump’s endorsement has turned it into a divisive issue. Arab governments, wary of being seen as complicit in Palestinian displacement, have been quick to condemn it.

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Al-Shifa hospital

Smoke rises during an Israeli strike in the vicinity of the al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City on March 28, 2024 amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas terrorists. (AFP via Getty Images)

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However, with Gaza in ruins and no reconstruction in sight, the debate over emigration is no longer theoretical. The question is not whether Gazans want to leave, but whether they will have the opportunity to do so.

A Gazan man interviewed on-camera by the Center for Peace Communications said «In the end, people will accept reality. They’ll emigrate because they want to live. They want to live in a country that protects and supports them. A country where you can hold your head up high. If our country isn’t looking out for us, where should we go?»

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this article.


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INTERNACIONAL

Aviones venezolanos trasladan a migrantes deportados de EE.UU. a Venezuela

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Los vuelos, que salieron de Fort Bliss, en Texas, representan una importante victoria para el presidente Trump, quien ha prometido llevar a cabo deportaciones generalizadas.

Dos vuelos que transportan a migrantes venezolanos de Estados Unidos a Venezuela llegaron a su destino a última hora del lunes, informó el Ministerio del Poder Popular para la Comunicación y la Información del país.

Los vuelos representan una importante victoria para el gobierno de Donald Trump, que durante su campaña prometió deportar a millones de migrantes indocumentados.

Para lograr este objetivo, el presidente Trump necesita que Nicolás Maduro, el autocrático mandatario de Venezuela, acceda a recibir a algunas de esas personas.

Nicolás Maduro, participando durante su programa semanal, en Caracas, Venezuela, el 10 de febrero de 2025. Maduro felicitó al personal de la aerolínea estatal Conviasa por las labores que han permitido el regreso de los venezolanos y pidió a su ministro de Interior, Justicia y Paz, Diosdado Cabello, cumplir con todos los protocolos de manera exhaustiva para revisar la situación de cada uno de los retornados. (Xinhua/Presidencia de Venezuela) (vf)

Dos aviones de la aerolínea venezolana Conviasa salieron de Fort Bliss, en Texas, donde se encuentran recluidos los migrantes sujetos a deportación, aproximadamente a las 10:45 a. m.

Tenían previsto llegar a Caracas a las 7:15 p. m., según el sitio de monitoreo de vuelos Flight Aware.

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Tras la ruptura de las relaciones entre Estados Unidos y Venezuela en 2019, el gobierno de Maduro se ha negado a aceptar ciudadanos deportados, excepto durante un breve periodo durante el gobierno de Biden.

El anuncio sobre los vuelos se produce tras la reciente visita a Venezuela de un asesor de Trump, Richard Grenell, que regresó a Estados Unidos con seis estadounidenses que habían sido detenidos por el gobierno de Maduro.

No está claro quiénes van en los vuelos del lunes, y algunos repatriados podrían enfrentar persecución al regresar.

En una declaración a los medios de comunicación, el gobierno venezolano dijo que había sido “notificado por el gobierno de los Estados Unidos de América” de que algunas de las personas que viajaban en los vuelos formaban parte del grupo criminal denominado Tren de Aragua.

El comunicado dijo que “las personas antes señaladas serán sometidas a una rigurosa investigación en cuanto toquen tierra venezolana y serán sujetos de las acciones previstas en nuestro sistema de justicia”.

Maduro está imputado en Estados Unidos, acusado por fiscales federales de participar en una conspiración de narcotráfico, y está siendo investigado por la Corte Penal Internacional por crímenes de lesa humanidad.

Julie Turkewitz es jefa del buró de los Andes para el Times, está radicada en Bogotá y cubre Colombia, Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador y Perú.

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