BERLIN: German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock announced on Thursday 50 million euros ($52.8 million) in aid for civilians in the Gaza Strip, on the first stage of a mini-tour of the Middle East.
Germany was also preparing to send medical teams into the Gaza Strip, she added, her ministry said in a statement.
The aim of her tour, she said, was to express “unwavering solidarity” and to help ensure Palestinian access to aid.
She announced the aid package in Jordan, the first stage of her tour of the region, which will also take in Lebanon and Israel.
“Our message is clear,” she said at a news conference in Amman with Jordan’s Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi, according to her ministry.
“We don’t abandon the innocent Palestinian mothers, fathers and children.”
Before her departure, Baerbock insisted on Israel’s “right to defend itself against Hamas terror” and accused the militant group of using the civilian population of the Gaza Strip as “human shields” in its conflict with Israel.
Hamas gunmen broke through Israel’s heavily fortified Gaza border on October 7, killing more than 1,400 people, most of them civilians, and taking at least 199 people hostage, according to Israel.
Israel has responded to the attacks with relentless air strikes on Gaza that have killed more than 3,470 people, mainly civilians, according to the Hamas-controlled health ministry.
It has also imposed a crippling siege on the Palestinian enclave that has left its inhabitants with dwindling supplies of food, water and fuel.
“It is important to me to make clear to Palestinians that we also recognize their suffering,” Baerbock said before starting her tour. The humanitarian situation in Gaza was “catastrophic,” she said.
Baerbock, who already visited Israel and Egypt last week followed by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, said Berlin was working closely with the G7, European Union and regional partners to ensure aid could flow into Gaza.
She said she would also “use the trip to speak with all those who have channels to Hamas” to discuss how to secure the release of hostages held by the group.
German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius made a surprise visit to Lebanon on Thursday.
Pistorius’s ministry said his visit “at short notice” was to thank German soldiers serving with UNIFIL, the UN peacekeeping force deployed in a buffer zone between northern Israel and southern Lebanon.
It posted on X, formerly Twitter, that the minister also intended to “get informed about the impact of the conflict in Israel and Gaza on the (German) contingent in the region.”
German FM announces $52.8 million aid for Gaza civilians
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German FM announces $52.8 million aid for Gaza civilians
- Says Germany was also preparing to send medical teams into the Gaza Strip
- Baerbock says Hamas militants should not use civilians as human shields
Man arrested in Thailand for smuggling rhino horn inside meat
BANGKOK: Thai authorities arrested a man for allegedly smuggling more than 11 kilograms of rhino horns inside wrapped meat, in a case officials linked on Tuesday to an international wildlife trafficking network.
The 36-year-old Vietnamese man was detained on Monday after landing at Bangkok’s main international airport on suspicion of illegal wildlife imports, the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation said in a statement.
He was traveling from Lubumbashi in the Democratic Republic of Congo to Laos, transiting through Ethiopia and Thailand, according to the department.
Airport authorities and police seized six pieces of rhinoceros horn and around 12 kilograms of unidentified meat used to conceal them inside a polystyrene icebox.
“There were some irregularities in the X-ray scan of the checked luggage so the authorities checked it,” the department said.
Sadudee Panpakdee, director of the department’s CITES division, told AFP officials were unsure of the value of the seized horns or what type of meat was used to conceal them.
The items were sent to a wildlife forensic laboratory for examination, officials said.
If convicted, the suspect faces up to 10 years in prison and a fine up to one million baht ($32,000).
All five rhino species are protected under international law and trade in their horns is banned.
Thailand is a major transit hub for wildlife smugglers who often sell highly prized endangered creatures on the lucrative black market in Asia.
The 36-year-old Vietnamese man was detained on Monday after landing at Bangkok’s main international airport on suspicion of illegal wildlife imports, the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation said in a statement.
He was traveling from Lubumbashi in the Democratic Republic of Congo to Laos, transiting through Ethiopia and Thailand, according to the department.
Airport authorities and police seized six pieces of rhinoceros horn and around 12 kilograms of unidentified meat used to conceal them inside a polystyrene icebox.
“There were some irregularities in the X-ray scan of the checked luggage so the authorities checked it,” the department said.
Sadudee Panpakdee, director of the department’s CITES division, told AFP officials were unsure of the value of the seized horns or what type of meat was used to conceal them.
The items were sent to a wildlife forensic laboratory for examination, officials said.
If convicted, the suspect faces up to 10 years in prison and a fine up to one million baht ($32,000).
All five rhino species are protected under international law and trade in their horns is banned.
Thailand is a major transit hub for wildlife smugglers who often sell highly prized endangered creatures on the lucrative black market in Asia.
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