Chief International Correspondent


A reconstruction plan to rival President Donald Trump’s idea for the US to “take over Gaza” and move out more than two million Palestinians is expected to be approved at an emergency summit in the Egyptian capital Cairo.
Egypt has produced another plan with a glossy brochure, 91 pages long and complete with some gleaming Emirati influenced designs, to counter the US scheme which shocked the Arab world and beyond.
Will a “Dubai on the Mediterranean” rise one day from the rubble of Gaza instead of the US’s “Riviera of the Middle East”?
What sets Cairo’s plan apart is that this blueprint is not just about property development; its banners are politics and the rights of Palestinians.
A leak of the draft statement obtained by the BBC underlines it is owned by Arab states and the Palestinians.
It will be “presented by Egypt, in full co-ordination with Palestine and Arab countries, based on studies conducted by the World Bank and the United Nations Development Programme regarding early recovery and reconstruction in Gaza as a comprehensive Arab plan”.
Most critically, it allows more than two million residents of Gaza to hold on to what is left of their lives, including their right to remain on land which generations of their families have called home.
President Trump continues to wonder aloud: “Why wouldn’t they want to move?” His description of Gaza as a “demolition site” underlines how, after almost 16 months of grievous war, the territory lies in utter ruin.
The UN says 90% of homes are damaged or destroyed. All the basics of a life worth living, from schools and hospitals to sewage systems and electricity lines, are shredded.
The leaked draft document does not explicitly refer to President Trump’s plan to “take over” the territory and move the Palestinians out, mainly to neighbouring countries. But it makes clear that moves like that will only trigger more disasters.
“Any malicious attempts to displace Palestinians or annex any part of occupied Palestinian territories would lead to new phases of conflict, undermine stability opportunities, expand conflict into other countries in the region, and pose a clear threat to peace foundations in the Middle East,” it warns.


Ever since the US president suddenly spoke of his plan, there has been huge pressure on Arab states not just to come up with an alternative plan but to prove it can work.
Property developers know presentation matters.
President Trump deepened the shock and anger around his ideas when he posted an AI-generated video of a golden Gaza on his Truth Social account last week.
It featured a shimmering statue of himself, his close ally Elon Musk enjoying snacks on the beach, and he and the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sunning themselves, shirtless. All to a catchy tune with lines like “Trump Gaza is finally here”.
“They had President Trump in mind,” remarked one Western diplomat who attended a briefing about Egypt’s plan at the foreign ministry in Cairo. “It’s very glossy and very well-prepared.”
Cairo’s reconstruction plans, which the BBC has obtained, with their alluring images of leafy neighbourhoods and grand columned buildings, is said to have drawn on a wide range of expertise, from World Bank professionals on sustainability, to Dubai developers on hotels.
There are also lessons learned from other ravaged cities which rose from the ruins including Hiroshima, Beirut, and Berlin.
And the proposed designs are also influenced by Egypt’s own experience in developing its “New Cairo” – its grand megaproject which has seen a new administrative capital rising from the desert – at great expense.
Who will pay for Gaza’s build is a major issue. Egypt is proposing that an international conference be convened as soon as possible for the “recovery and reconstruction”.
Wealthy Gulf states appear willing to foot some of the colossal bill the UN estimates will be around $50bn (£39bn).
But no-one is ready to invest unless they are absolutely convinced buildings will not come crashing down in another war.
A fragile ceasefire which now seems to be on the brink of collapse will only amplify that hesitation.
“We will hold intensive talks with major donor countries once the plan is adopted,” Egypt’s Foreign Minister, Badr Abdelatty, said on Sunday, underlining a hope that capitals the world over will help come up with the cash.


Another sensitive aspect is who will run Gaza once this current confrontation ends.
A leak of the draft statement, backed up by sources who have also seen the document, say there is a proposal for a transitional arrangement, a committee of technocrats called a “Gaza Management Committee under the umbrella of the Palestinian government”.
Benjamin Netanyahu, who describes President Trump’s Gaza plan as “visionary”, has repeatedly ruled out any future role for Hamas, but also for the Palestinian Authority.
The draft document “urges the United Nations Security Council to deploy international peacekeeping forces that contribute to ensuring security for both Palestinians and Israelis in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.”
Getting approval from Arab leaders for this new plan may be the easy part.
Hamas, which is said to have accepted it will not play a role in running Gaza, still has military and political sway on the ground.
Some Arab states are known to be calling for its complete dismantling; others believe those decisions should be left up to the Palestinians. Hamas itself says disarming is a red line.
As for President Trump, he has said he won’t “force” his ideas on anyone but still insists his plan is the one “that really works”.


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