Tony Blair and Palestinian vice president discuss ceasefire, Gaza reconstruction

Former British prime minister Tony Blair held a meeting in Ramallah with the vice president of the Palestinian Authority, Hussein al-Sheikh, on Sunday. (Wafa)
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Updated 13 October 2025
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Tony Blair and Palestinian vice president discuss ceasefire, Gaza reconstruction

  • Hussein Al-Sheikh, Blair hold talks on Donald Trump’s plan
  • Meeting precedes the release of Palestinian, Israeli captives

LONDON: Tony Blair, the former British prime minister, held talks on Sunday with Hussein Al-Sheikh, the vice president of the Palestinian Authority, on implementing US President Donald Trump’s peace plan.

The meeting in Ramallah, the administrative seat of the PA, took place on the eve of the Israeli regime and Hamas preparing to release hundreds of Palestinian prisoners and several Israeli hostages on Monday.

Al-Sheikh and Blair are working to help stop Israel’s war and establish lasting peace in the region, the Wafa news agency reported.

“We have confirmed our readiness to work with President Trump, Mr. Blair and the partners to consolidate the ceasefire, the entry of aid, the release of hostages and prisoners, and then start with the recovery and reconstruction,” Al-Sheikh wrote on X.

“We stressed the importance of stopping the undermining of the Palestinian Authority, and especially the return of the withheld Palestinian revenues and preventing the undermining of the two-state solution in preparation for a comprehensive and lasting peace in accordance with international legitimacy.”

Blair, who served as the special envoy of the Quartet on the Middle East from 2007 to 2015, is included in Trump’s 20-point Gaza plan.

He is expected to be part of an international transitional body responsible for overseeing and supervising the funding and redevelopment of the Palestinian coastal territory.


Israeli forces open fire on UN peacekeepers in Lebanon, no injuries reported

A photograph taken from Israel shows a United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) watchtower on Lebanese side of border.
Updated 16 November 2025
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Israeli forces open fire on UN peacekeepers in Lebanon, no injuries reported

  • Lebanese military said in a statement that Israeli violations of its sovereignty caused instability within the country and hindered its own forces from deploying in the south

JERUSALEM: Israeli military forces opened fire on United Nations peacekeepers in southern Lebanon on Sunday, in an incident the UN peacekeeping mission described as a serious violation.
None of the UN forces were reported wounded.
Israeli soldiers had opened fire on two suspects in the El Hamames area near the Israeli border, only later realizing that they were UN peacekeepers, the military said in a statement.
The military said the peacekeepers were misidentified due to poor weather conditions. The incident was under review, it said.
The United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon said the Israeli forces had fired from a Merkava tank positioned inside Lebanese territory toward the peacekeepers, who were on foot. Heavy machine gun fire landed five meters from the peacekeepers, who were forced to seek shelter, it said.
The Israeli tank withdrew after peacekeepers contacted the Israeli military through official channels, UNIFIL said.
UNIFIL called the incident a “serious violation” of UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which, among other provisions, states that no armed forces should be operating in southern Lebanon except the UN peacekeepers and the Lebanese military.
The Lebanese military said in a statement that Israeli violations of its sovereignty caused instability within the country and hindered its own forces from deploying in the south.
The Israeli military occupies five posts within Lebanon and frequently carries out airstrikes in the country’s south that it says are targeting Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah.
Israel and Hezbollah agreed to a ceasefire last year that required the Lebanese militant group not to have any weapons in the south and for Israeli forces to fully withdraw from Lebanon.
Israel accuses Hezbollah of trying to rearm, while Lebanon’s government accuses Israel of violating the agreement by not withdrawing and continuing to carry out airstrikes.