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Germany wants to organize Gaza reconstruction conference

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz briefs the media after a leaders meeting of the government's coalition at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany, Thursday, Oct. 9, 2025. (AP)
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz briefs the media after a leaders meeting of the government's coalition at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany, Thursday, Oct. 9, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 10 October 2025

Germany wants to organize Gaza reconstruction conference

Germany wants to organize Gaza reconstruction conference
  • Merz said Germany would provide an additional €29 million ($33.6 million) in humanitarian aid and would also help in “supporting the medical and psychological care of the released hostages”

BERLIN: Germany wants to organize an international conference with Egypt for the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip, Chancellor Friedrich Merz said on Friday, as Israel and Hamas edged closer to ending hostilities.
The main goal of this conference “should be to address the most urgent needs, such as rebuilding water and energy supplies and medical care,” Merz said in a statement.
A spokeswoman for the German Development Ministry said on Friday that Berlin could quickly provide 850 temporary accommodation units for Gaza.
“Fifty of them are in Ramallah and can quickly be brought to Gaza so that people can be provided with urgently needed shelter,” she said, adding that 90 to 92 percent of Gaza’s buildings have been badly damaged or destroyed.

The main goal of the conference should be to address the most urgent needs, such as rebuilding water and energy supplies and medical care.

Chancellor, Friedrich Merz

On Friday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said the government had “approved the framework” of a hostage release deal with Hamas.
Merz said the deal must be “implemented swiftly” and that “the hostages, including German nationals, must finally return to their families.”
“Humanitarian aid must quickly reach the people in Gaza,” he added.
Merz said Germany would provide an additional €29 million ($33.6 million) in humanitarian aid and would also help in “supporting the medical and psychological care of the released hostages.”
Netanyahu said on Friday that 48 hostages were still in Gaza, 20 of them still alive and 28 dead.
One of the dead is understood to be an Israeli soldier killed in 2014 whose remains are being held by Hamas.
Four of those still alive are reported to be German nationals.
Gaza’s civil defense agency said on Friday that Israeli forces had begun pulling back from parts of the territory, particularly in Gaza City and Khan Younis.
“Israeli forces have withdrawn from several areas in Gaza City,” said Mohammed Al-Mughayyir, a senior official with the agency.
He added that Israeli military vehicles had also pulled out from sections of the southern city of Khan Younis.
Palestinians have expressed relief that the war may end, tempered with concern about the future and lingering pain from the staggering death and destruction.


NATO's Rutte says nuclear drills showed alliance has strong deterrent

NATO's Rutte says nuclear drills showed alliance has strong deterrent
Updated 9 sec ago

NATO's Rutte says nuclear drills showed alliance has strong deterrent

NATO's Rutte says nuclear drills showed alliance has strong deterrent
  • Says "Putin must know that nuclear war can never be won and must never be fought"

BERLIN: NATO chief Mark Rutte said the success earlier this month of the military alliance's annual nuclear exercise gave him "absolute confidence in the credibility of NATO's nuclear deterrence" in the face of Russian threats.
"When Russia is using dangerous and reckless nuclear rhetoric, our populations must know that there is no need to panic, because NATO has a strong nuclear deterrent," he was quoted as saying by German weekly Welt am Sonntag.
"And (Russian President Vladimir) Putin must know that nuclear war can never be won and must never be fought.”
Putin has repeatedly warned the West of potential nuclear consequences since Russia’s 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
He declared last month that Russia could use nuclear weapons if it was struck with conventional missiles, and that Moscow would consider any assault on it supported by a nuclear power to be a joint attack.