Netanyahu says Israel will control ‘all of Gaza’ after latest offensive

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declares in his first press conference since December that the entire Gaza Strip will be under Israeli military rule when the besieged Palestinian enclave is overthrown.

As hunger persecutes and only a small number of aid trucks are allowed in with the blockade in place, hundreds of Palestinians have been killed in recent days. At least 82 have died as a result of Israeli relentless bombardment across Gaza.

Israel will be willing to negotiate a temporary ceasefire and hostage exchange deal, according to Netanyahu’s statement on Wednesday.

The release of all prisoners, the disarmament of Hamas, the exile of its leaders, and the possibility of carrying out President Donald Trump’s proposed plan in February to expel Palestinians from Gaza were all demands made by the Israeli leader.

Trump has suggested that the US should run Gaza and establish it as the “Riviera of the Middle East.” Netanyahu has mentioned Trump’s plan as one of the conditions for halting fighting for the first time. The plan has been characterized as ethnic cleansing by numerous countries and human rights organizations.

In response to Israel’s decision to allow a limited number of humanitarian aid trucks into Gaza, Netanyahu said Israel should avoid a “humanitarian crisis to preserve our freedom of operational action.” He also made reference to a highly critical plan that was “developed with the US” to distribute food in the enclave without Hamas gaining control of it. The Palestinian organization denies providing aid.

Gaza receives limited aid, but there is no distribution.

Israel has been under international pressure to halt its repressing total blockade of Gaza, which had forcibly halted any food or aid trucks entering the area since March 2.

The enclave’s already terrible humanitarian catastrophe has become even worse because of it. More than 93% of Gaza’s children, or about 930 000, are on the verge of famine, according to an assessment conducted by the UN-backed Integrated Food Security Phase Classification.

The Israeli army approved 100 aid trucks carrying flour, baby food, and medical supplies into Gaza on Wednesday. According to UN officials, distribution issues have prevented aid from reaching those in need.

The Karem Abu Salem border crossing and the enviable supplies that are finally being allowed into Kerem Shalom [in Arabic] are nowhere near sufficient to meet the enormous needs in Gaza. The UN chief’s spokesperson, Stephane Dujarric, said that much, much more aid needs to enter.

Aid organizations have criticized Netanyahu’s efforts as “smokescreen” as Israel’s aid is not nearly enough, according to aid organizations.

According to Pascale Coissard, the emergency coordinator for Doctors Without Borders, the Israeli government’s decision to allow a ridiculously low amount of aid into Gaza after months of an air-tight siege indicates that they intend to avoid making the accusations that they are starving and that they are actually keeping them surviving.

A “pressured, obsessed, lying man”

The press conference by Netanyahu received swift criticism. His “words today” refer to the country’s long occupation of Gaza and the daily demise of soldiers, according to opposition leader Yair Lapid, who warned that the nation’s reputation would collapse and the economy would suffer severe harm.

After the news conference, Democrats party leader Yair Golan remarked, “I saw a presentation by a pressured, obsessed, lying man who takes no responsibility for anything.” We will win you in the elections very soon and send you to the pages of history, and I will sue you for defamation for the lies I spread about myself.”

Can Ramaphosa charm offensive help fix South Africa’s ties with Trump’s US?

Johannesburg, South Africa – When the millionaire mining magnate-turned-president of South Africa landed in Washington to meet the billionaire real estate tycoon-turned-president of the United States, it was with a deal in mind.

Tensions have been escalating between the US and its African trade ally since Donald Trump took office this year, cut off aid to South Africa, repeated false accusations that a “white genocide” is taking place there and began welcoming Afrikaners as refugees.

At the meeting between Trump and Cyril Ramaphosa in the White House on Wednesday, the South African president began by focusing heavily on trade and investments, highlighting the two countries’ years of cooperation, in keeping with statements made by South Africa’s presidency that Ramaphosa would present a trade deal to the US.

But Trump responded with a well-prepared redirect that South African media and analysts described as an “ambush” and a move that “blindsided” Ramaphosa.

Ready with printouts of news articles about alleged white victims of killings in South Africa and a video of firebrand opposition politician Julius Malema singing Kill the Boer, Trump insisted that white farmers were being targeted and murdered – an assertion Ramaphosa politely yet firmly denied, saying criminality was a problem for all South Africans regardless of race.

The team Ramaphosa assembled to join him on his working visit – which included four white South Africans: two golf legends, the wealthiest man in the country and the agriculture minister – all reaffirmed Ramaphosa’s facts that while violence was widespread, white people were not specifically being targeted.

“We have a real safety problem in South Africa, and I don’t think anyone wants to candy-coat that,” said John Steenhuisen, the agriculture minister and a member of the Democratic Alliance party, which is part of South Africa’s governing coalition.

“Certainly, the majority of South Africa’s commercial and smallholder farmers really do want to stay in South Africa and make it work,” the minister, who is himself an Afrikaner, said. Trump claimed that “thousands” of white farmers were fleeing South Africa.

Steenhuisen added that the people in the video Trump showed were leaders of opposition minority parties and his party had joined forces with Ramaphosa “precisely to keep those people out of power”.

From second left, businessman Johann Rupert speaks next to golfers Retief Goosen and Ernie Els in the Oval Office during a meeting between US President Donald Trump and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa on May 21, 2025. [Kevin Lamarque/Reuters]

‘The lion’s den’

The meeting began cordially where Trump complimented South African golfers, including well-known Ernie Els and Retief Goosen, who were part of the delegation. They both implored Trump for enhanced trade to uplift South Africa’s economy.

Also in the delegation was South Africa’s richest man, Johann Rupert, a luxury-goods mogul and an Afrikaner. He countered claims of racial persecution against the white minority, saying that while criminality was rife, Black people were more often the victims.

“We have too many deaths, but it’s across the board. It is not only white farmers,” Rupert said to Trump.

Ramaphosa kept his cool, local media and observers said, noting that the South African president chose to remain calm, patient and light-hearted even in light of Trump’s attack.

He steered talks back to trade, saying South Africa needed economic investment from its allies, and mostly sat expressionless while the video was played, occasionally stretching his neck to look at it.

Ramaphosa went into “the lion’s den” and was met with an ambush but he remained calm, South African political analyst Sanusha Naidu said.

“Ramaphosa and the delegation did not allow themselves to be baited into an emotional response. That’s critical. They made Trump feel like he had the upper hand in the meeting,” she told Al Jazeera, adding that given the narrative from Trump before Ramaphosa’s arrival, it “could have gone worse”.

When asked by a reporter whether he wanted the impasse between the US and South Africa resolved, Trump said he was open to it.

“I hope it has to be resolved. It should be resolved,” he said, adding that if it were not resolved, it would be “the end of the country”.

‘Reset’ relations

Before the two leaders met on Wednesday, Ramaphosa’s office said the aim was to “reset” relations, especially as the US is South Africa’s second largest trading partner after China.

“Whether we like it or not, we are joined at the hip, and we need to be talking to them,” the South African president said before his trip.

Christopher Isike, a political scientist at the University of Pretoria, told Al Jazeera that direct engagement between the leaders was important, given the tense relations between their countries.

“This is an opportunity for South Africa to correct misinformation peddled by President Trump and try to reset trade relations between the two countries,” he said.

Isike noted that both presidents’ backgrounds as businesspeople could provide common ground for discussing mutually advantageous deals.

“Rich friends of Ramaphosa are also rich friends of Trump, and that may have helped facilitate the meeting,” Isike added.

Common ground and level heads would be useful as the leaders continued private talks away from the media on Wednesday, observers said.

Before the visit, Ramaphosa maintained that while Trump was a dealmaker, he too was adept at making deals and even joked about the possibility of playing a round of golf with his US counterpart.

Washington, however, has criticised Pretoria for a host of matters since Trump took office. This continued in the meeting on Wednesday.

Trump focused on the white farmers, particularly Afrikaners – the descendants of mainly Dutch settlers who instituted apartheid. He alleged they are being killed because of their race despite evidence showing that attacks and killings are common across all groups in the country.

Trump also mentioned South Africa’s land reform law that allows land in the public interest to be taken without compensation in exceptional circumstances in an effort to redress apartheid injustices. Pretoria said no white land has been taken, but the US said the law unfairly targets minority white South Africans who are the majority landholders.

Despite Pretoria consistently seeking to rectify false assertions, the Trump administration has pushed ahead with a plan to take in Afrikaners as refugees. The first group arrived last week. He has also cut aid, including vital support for life-saving HIV programmes, to South Africa.

Additionally, there are worries that Trump may not attend the Group of 20 summit being held in South Africa in November and his government may not renew the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), key US trade legislation that assists economies in sub-Saharan Africa. It expires in September.

Elon Musk looks on as U.S. President Donald Trump meets South African President Cyril Ramaphosa in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 21, 2025. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
South Africa native Elon Musk attends the meeting between US President Donald Trump and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa in the Oval Office [Kevin Lamarque/Reuters]

Trade and investments

Before Wednesday’s meetings, Ramaphosa said strengthening trade relations between the two countries was his primary motivation for travelling to Washington, DC.

“We want to come out of the United States with a really good trade deal, investment promotion. We invest in the United States, and they invest in us. We want to strengthen those relations. We want to consolidate relations between the two countries,” he said.

This week, South Africa’s ministers of trade and agriculture, Parks Tau and Steenhuisen, met with US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer to present the first draft of a trade deal.

In 2024, total goods trade between the US and South Africa amounted to $20.5bn. This included $5.8bn in US exports to South Africa and $14.7bn in South African exports to the US.

However, some observers said that at the heart of the potential trade deal is what South Africa could offer billionaire and close Trump ally, Elon Musk, given his ongoing claims about obstacles he allegedly faces in operating Starlink, his satellite internet company, in the country where he was born due to its transformation laws.

These laws seek to redress past injustices that kept Black people destitute and require businesses over a certain size to have a 30 percent equity stake held by members of previously disadvantaged groups.

Speaking at the Doha Economic Forum on Tuesday, Musk reiterated his assertions about laws he claimed were biased against white people despite experts explaining that most of those only seek to promote racial justice.

“All races must be on equal footing in South Africa. That is the right thing to do. Do not replace one set of racist laws with another set of racist laws, which is utterly wrong and improper,” Musk said.

“I am in an absurd situation where I was born in South Africa but cannot get a licence to operate Starlink because I am not Black,” he claimed.

Before Wednesday’s meeting, a White House official told the Reuters news agency Trump is likely to tell Ramaphosa that all US companies in South Africa should be exempt from “racial requirements”.

Opposition figure Malema’s party, the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), threatened legal action after news that the government was considering offering regulatory assurances to Musk’s Starlink. The EFF said the move would be unconstitutional and shows Ramaphosa is willing to compromise the country’s sovereignty to “massage the inflated ego of Musk and Trump”.

Isike said that while trade concessions would be discussed, he doubted the South African government would give up its laws to appease Musk.

“I will be surprised if Starlink gets its way by refusing to follow South African transformation laws, which require 30 percent Black ownership of a foreign company,” he said.

U.S. President Donald Trump shows a copy of an article that he said its about white South Africans who had been killed, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 21, 2025. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
During his meeting with Ramaphosa, US President Donald Trump shows a copy of an article that he said is about white South Africans who had been killed [Kevin Lamarque/Reuters]

‘Genocide’ claims

Meanwhile, in private talks, Ramaphosa and Trump were also expected to discuss foreign policy issues, including peace prospects between Russia and Ukraine and South Africa’s support for Palestine and its genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

Some political observers said Pretoria is in the US crosshairs partly because of its actions against the key Washington ally.

Patrick Bond, a sociology professor at the University of Johannesburg, predicted before the talks that the US might offer to retract claims of “white genocide” in exchange for South Africa dropping its case at the ICJ.

South Africa is seeking to hold Israel accountable for its assault on Gaza, which has killed more than 53,000 Palestinians since October 2023. The US is Israel’s strongest ally and arms supplier.

“We are very rational when it comes to discussing global and geopolitical matters. We will put South African positions first, and our foreign policy positions will be clarified,” Ramaphosa said before the meeting.

As the Gaza genocide case against Israel continues in The Hague, US allegations of a widely discredited “white genocide” in South Africa continue to follow the country’s leadership.

Before Trump and Ramaphosa retreated to private meetings on Wednesday, a reporter asked the US president if he had decided whether genocide was being committed in South Africa. “I haven’t made up my mind,” he replied.

The unfounded claim of white genocide has “taken on a life of its own”, analyst Paolo von Schirach, president of the Global Policy Institute in Washington, DC, told Al Jazeera.

It will be difficult for Ramaphosa and Trump to rebound after the Oval Office “ambush”, he said.

Member of Irish rap band Kneecap charged with ‘terrorism’ offence

A member of the Irish rap group Kneecap was accused of “terrorism” in the United Kingdom for allegedly waving the Hezbollah flag at a concert in London in November 2024.

British police announced on Wednesday that Liam O’Hanna, who goes by the stage name Mo Chara, will appear in court on June 18 and is facing charges of terrorism.

Since the Hamas attacks on October 7, 2023-led Hamas attacks and Israel’s devastating war on Gaza, Kneecap has been vocal in its support for the Palestinian cause, comparing struggles of the Irish and Palestinians under Israeli rule.

Pro-Palestinian chants are a regular feature at their shows. The band claims that their blatant condemnation of Israel’s genocidal war has drawn criticism.

The Belfast trio is also well known for its satirical and political lyrics and use of symbolism in reference to the Irish Republican movement, which seeks to unite Northern Ireland, which is currently a part of the UK, with the Republic of Ireland.

During “The Troubles,” which included the Irish Republican Army (IRA), pro-British Loyalist militias, and UK security forces, more than 3,600 people were killed.

The term “kneecap” comes from a brutal punishment that paramilitary groups carried out on informers and drug dealers that involved being shot in the kneecaps.

The Irish-language cultural scene in Northern Ireland, where the status of the language is still a contentious political issue in a divided society between Protestant British Unionists and Catholic Irish Nationalists, has received praise from the band.

Additionally, its lyrics, which are full of expletives and drug references, have received criticism.

Kneecap’s performance at the California music festival Coachella attracted a lot of attention and criticism last month when they projected the words “F*** Israel.” Palestine that is free. on the ground.

“We were never bombed from the f****** skies with nowhere to go,” says one Brit who persecuted the Irish not very long ago. The Palestinians are bombing their home from the sky because they are unable to leave. What the hell are you calling it if you’re not referring to it as a genocide? read the Mo Chara projections.

Kneecap was brought under fresh scrutiny at the start of this month when UK intelligence announced that it would look into rap group comments regarding UK and Middle Eastern politics.

The band member said, “The only good Tory is a dead Tory,” according to footage from a 2024 concert. Your neighborhood politician should be dead. A member of the trio reportedly shouts “Up Hamas, Up Hezbollah” during a 2023 promotional video from another concert, which the UK views as “terrorist” organizations.

In response to the band’s criticism of Israel’s attacks on Palestinians in Gaza, Kneecap claimed it had “never supported Hamas or Hezbollah” and accused “establishment figures” of fabricating moral nonsense.

US judge finds South Sudan-linked deportation flight violated court order

A federal judge in the United States has reportedly violated President Donald Trump’s administration’s injunction to deport migrants to South Sudan.

The Trump administration has been repeatedly criticized for ignoring court orders, but the announcement from US District Judge Brian Murphy on Wednesday sets up yet another judicial battle.

Judge Murphy, who lives in Boston, Massachusetts, has not yet disclosed what he will do in response to the glaring violation. That inquiry was put on hold until later.

However, he claimed that the passengers on Tuesday’s flight were not given enough time to file a deportation complaint, which was in violation of Murphy’s April 18 injunction.

A reasonable period of time had been granted to migrants who had been removed from their own country in a third-party country in order to challenge their deportations, according to Murphy’s ruling.

However, the Trump administration has repeatedly refuted claims that it will comply with policies’ arbitrary rules, instead branding judges like Murphy as “activists”.

Elainis Perez, a lawyer for Trump’s Justice Department, declined to confirm the location of the deportation flight during the court hearing on Wednesday, claiming that divulging the information raised “very serious operational and safety concerns.”

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) also held a press conference to discuss the issue and support the deportation flight.

The passengers on board were accused of murder, armed robbery, rape, and sexual assault, according to acting ICE Director Todd Lyons.

Lyons remarked that “his country would not take him back” in the case of one immigrant. He referred to these nations as “recalcitrant.”

The removals were described as a “diplomatic and military security operation,” according to Tricia McLaughlin, a DHS spokesperson.

She claimed that eight migrants had been deported alone for safety reasons and that they are still in DHS custody despite having actually left the US.

She continued, citing security concerns, adding, “We cannot tell you where these people will ultimately end up.”

However, she did mention the possibility that their lawyers had indicated in court filings that they might be currently in South Sudan.

She continued, “We’re confirming the fact that that’s not their final destination,” adding, “I would caution you to assume that their final destination is South Sudan.”

Lawyers for the migrants claimed their clients were from Myanmar, Vietnam, and other nations in the court filings on Tuesday. They added that their clients don’t understand their removal notices because they only understand it through a translator.

They allegedly received no more than 24 hours’ notice before being deported. She claimed on Tuesday morning that she was informed that her client had been taken to South Sudan, a nation with a turbulent history and a history of human rights violations, as one lawyer attempted to locate him.

Due to the possibility that the migrants might face dangers in the nations they were deported to, Judge Murphy had previously ordered the migrants to have at least 15 days to file a grievance.

He has also ruled that the US government must keep the migrants in its custody and ensure their safety while the hearings take place.

McLaughlin, however, claimed that the “activist judge” was “trying to protect” the migrants, who she described as “some of the most barbaric, violent individuals.”

It is absurd for a district judge to try to dictate the United States of America’s foreign policy and national security, she said.

McLaughlin and the other officials also claimed that the Trump administration was seeking to relocate these people to “safe third countries.”

Because of their barbaric and monstrous crimes, she claimed, “no country on earth wanted to accept them.”

We found a country that was willing to accept custody of these vicious illegal aliens thanks to the courageous work of the State Department, ICE, and the president’s national security team.

As part of its justification for its “mass deportation,” the Trump administration has been accused of raising concerns about immigration-related crime among its citizens.

Is European pressure on Israel likely to make a difference?

As the EU threatens to review ties with Israel, the UK puts off trade talks.

Some of Israel’s most powerful allies are praising the country’s continued aggression in Gaza.

Both the UK and the EU are reviewing old agreements, and both are imposing sanctions on Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank.

The two countries say they can’t stand by while Israel expands its military and airstrikes and starves Palestinians in Gaza of its total blockade.

However, critics are asking why they didn’t intervene earlier.

Will new regulations be implemented?

Will any of this affect the Palestinians’ perception of reality on the ground?

Presenter:

Thibault, Folly Bah

Guests:

Former EU ambassador to Egypt and Jordan, James Moran

Yossi Mekelberg, senior consulting associate at Chatham House

Israeli top court rules Shin Bet chief Ban’s firing by Netanyahu ‘unlawful’

The government’s decision to fire domestic security chief Ronen Bar was declared unlawful by Israel’s Supreme Court, which is the most recent twist in a tense power struggle between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s administration and the country’s judiciary.

The government’s decision to oust the Shin Bet’s head was made through an improper and unlawful process, the top court said on Wednesday in its decision.

Additionally, it stated that Netanyahu’s desire to get Bar fired was in conflict with the Shin Bet’s investigation into alleged ties between the prime minister’s aides and Qatar.

The Hamas-led October 7 attack, which the two men have co-sponsored, has sparked heated exchanges of accusations and barbs.

Netanyahu stated at the beginning that he would fire Bar because of a “trust breakdown,” implying that it was connected to the Gaza war that followed. However, Bar claimed that a number of events occurred between November 2024 and February 2025 that led to Netanyahu’s choice.

Bar claimed in the unclassified portion of the court submission that Netanyahu had “on more than one occasion” promised to investigate Israelis involved in anti-government demonstrations, with a particular emphasis on tracking down the protesters’ financial backers.

The Shin Bet head added that he had also refrained from signing a security request to prevent Netanyahu from giving evidence in a continuing corruption trial where he is accused of bribery, fraud, and breach of trust.

According to a report from the Times of Israel, the court stated that Bar’s dismissal was based on “a factual basis” and did not require a formal hearing before firing him.

In addition to “a disregard for fundamental principles regarding internal security,” Bar was fired in the ruling on Wednesday, which also included “irregularities” in the process that led to Bar’s dismissal.

In March, the far-right government launched a wave of protests and accusations of autocratic behavior after the cabinet voted to remove Bar.

The High Court of Justice halted the appeal until a hearing was held. Numerous organizations, including opposition politicians, had filed petitions with the court challenging the government’s decision.

A day after Bar announced his resignation, the government reversed his decision in April.