US firm involved in defunct Gaza aid scheme recruits new officers, website shows

Palestinians walk near a landfill, in Gaza City, February 11, 2026. (REUTERS)
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Updated 11 February 2026
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US firm involved in defunct Gaza aid scheme recruits new officers, website shows

  • Trump’s plan for Gaza calls for a surge in humanitarian aid, for Israel to withdraw after Hamas lays down its arms, and for the territory ⁠to be rebuilt

JERUSALEM: The US security firm that deployed armed military veterans to Gaza to guard aid sites run by a now-defunct distribution operation is seeking to hire Arabic-speaking contractors with combat experience, according to job ​listings on its website.
North Carolina-based UG Solutions, which provided security for the US- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation last year, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on its new job listings or say whether it was planning new Gaza operations or security operations elsewhere in the region.
The GHF, which was shut down following a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in October, had faced criticism from the United Nations and other international bodies over the deaths of hundreds of Palestinians trying to reach its aid sites.
It had bypassed the UN and the established aid agencies operating in Gaza to distribute food at sites mostly located away from much of the population and near Israeli forces. ‌UG Solutions provided the ‌GHF with security contractors to guard aid transport and distribution.
The GHF did not ​respond ‌to ⁠a ​request for ⁠comment sent to its press email. It consistently defended its approach to security during the months it operated in Gaza.
Palestinians could regard any return of UG Solutions to the enclave as troubling because of the violence that took place during GHF distributions last year.
“The GHF and those who stand behind it have Palestinian blood on their hands; they are not welcome to return to Gaza,” said Amjad Al-Shawa, head of the Palestinian NGOs Network, which liases with UN and international humanitarian agencies.

GO-TO SECURITY FIRM
When the GHF shut down, UG Solutions said it remained “the go-to security firm to help those focused on rebuilding and delivering ⁠aid” as envisaged in US President Donald Trump’s plan to end the war.
One of ‌the jobs on the firm’s website, an International Humanitarian Security Officer, would ‌involve “securing key infrastructure, facilitating humanitarian efforts, and ensuring stability in a dynamic environment.” ​Preferred credentials include proficiency with “small arms weapons.”
Another, targeting only female ‌candidates, is for a Cultural Support Officer who would ensure “safe, effective, and culturally appropriate aid distribution.”
Both listings say UG ‌Solutions is seeking to hire multiple officers, without delineating how many. They both list Arabic proficiency as a preferred qualification. The security officer role lists four or more years of active duty deployment as a preferred credential.
The job listings did not specify a place of work for the roles, and Gaza is not mentioned. Apart from Gaza, UG Solutions has not been publicly linked with operations ‌in other Arabic-speaking locations.

TRUMP PLAN
Trump’s plan for Gaza calls for a surge in humanitarian aid, for Israel to withdraw after Hamas lays down its arms, and for the territory ⁠to be rebuilt under ⁠the supervision of a “Board of Peace” led by the US President.
The Board is holding a meeting in Washington next week that is expected to serve in part as a fundraiser. Those funds would help pay for a plan envisaged by Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, that would see Gaza rebuilt in stages, beginning in Rafah in a southern area under Israeli military control.
Rafah is where the GHF stood up three of its four aid locations, the routes to which drew Palestinians desperate for food. Israeli forces killed hundreds of Palestinians trying to seek aid at GHF sites, according to Gaza health officials and the United Nations, which called the operations inherently dangerous and a violation of humanitarian principles that require aid distribution to be conducted safely.
The Israeli military has acknowledged that some Palestinians were hurt without saying how many. It says its soldiers fired to control crowds and quell immediate threats, and it changed procedures following the incidents.
UG Solutions is ​hiring for at least 15 roles within its defense ​division, including the International Humanitarian Security Officer and the Cultural Support Officer. Those roles’ work locations are marked as ‘Worldwide’. The other 13 roles are marked as “remote” within the US, with travel required.


Extermination of Palestinians must stop: African Union chair

Updated 20 min 51 sec ago
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Extermination of Palestinians must stop: African Union chair

ADDIS ABABA: The “extermination” of the Palestinian people must end, the chairman of the African Union Commission Mahmoud Ali Youssouf said on Saturday as he launched the organization’s 39th summit.
“In the Middle East, Palestine and the suffering of its people also challenge our consciences. The extermination of this people must stop,” said Youssouf, who was elected to head the institution a year ago.
The Gaza Strip, a small territory surrounded by Israel, Egypt, and the Mediterranean Sea, has been under a very strict Israeli siege since the start of the war triggered by Hamas’s deadly attack on October 7, 2023.
That attack resulted in the deaths of 1,221 people on the Israeli side, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official data.
Since then, at least 71,667 Palestinians have been killed in the small coastal territory by Israel’s retaliatory military campaign, according to Gaza’s health ministry.
He also touched on the multiple conflicts raging in Africa.
“From Sudan to the Sahel, to eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, in Somalia and elsewhere, our people continue to pay the heavy price of instability,” Youssouf said.
The summit brings together heads of state from the 55 member states of the African Union over two days.
This year’s theme is water sanitation.