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.


Forensic report says Istanbul tourists deaths likely due to chemical poisoning

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Forensic report says Istanbul tourists deaths likely due to chemical poisoning

ISTANBUL: A forensic report into the deaths of four members of a Turkish-German family on holiday in Istanbul revealed they were likely exposed to chemicals, local media reported on Wednesday.
The family, who traveled from Germany to Turkiye’s largest city for a vacation, fell ill last week after eating several popular street food dishes in the waterside neighborhood of Ortakoy, at the foot of a bridge spanning the Bosphorus.
Turkish prosecutors launched an investigation, initially focusing on suspected food poisoning.
Eleven people have been detained in connection with the incident.
But a forensic report based on samples taken from the mother and the two children showed that their death due to food poisoning was a “lower possibility,” the daily Cumhuriyet said, citing the report.
“Primarily, it is believed that they died as a result of chemical poisoning caused by the circumstances in the hotel where they were staying,” the forensic report said.
Turkish media had earlier reported that a substance was sprayed in a room on the ground floor of the hotel to combat a bed bug infestation, which may have reached the family’s room on the first floor through a bathroom vent.
The hotel in the Fatih neighborhood near Istanbul’s historic peninsula was evacuated on Saturday after two more guests were taken to hospital with similar symptoms. It was sealed off on Sunday.
The two children died on Thursday and their mother died a day later. The father was treated in intensive care until Monday when he too died.
The report said a definitive conclusion would be reached after further analysis was completed.
“The pathological, microbiological, and toxicological analysis of samples taken from mother and children will provide definitive conclusions regarding the causes of death,” it said.
The two children held German citizenship, an embassy spokesman in Ankara told AFP.
The forensic report also said samples of chemical substances used in the hotel would be examined by the chemistry department at the Forensic Medicine Institute.