Sun Club
DESTINATION GAZA

Gaza’s sparse tourist spots including hotels & restaurants vow to rebuild WITHOUT Trump’s ‘Middle East Riviera’ plan

Watch Trump announce his shock plans to takeover Gaza in the video

GAZA’S tourist spots have vowed to rebuild their own seafront holiday hotels and restaurants without Donald Trump’s shock takeover plan.

The President surprised the world when he said the US should take over the war-torn state and create his vision of a “Riviera of the Middle East”.

Advertisement
The historic Pasha’s Palace in Gaza City pictured before the war in 2019Credit: Khalil Hamra / AP Images for NPR
Pasha’s Palace destroyed by Israeli air strikes (pictured in February, 2024)Credit: Getty
The Al Qalaa restaurant in Gaza before the warCredit: Al Qalaa
The Al Qalaa restaurant stands damagedCredit: Reuters

Trump's idea included relocating two million Palestinians to neighbouring countries like Jordan and Egypt while the US reconstructs the area he called a “demolition site”.

The US President said he would turn Gaza into the "most spectacular development on Earth” but Palestinians have argued they will reconstruct the area themselves.

Before the Israel-Hamas war broke out with the October 7 attacks, the densely populated land had developed a tourism scene that was also popular with Israeli tourists.

Its Mediterranean shores were made the most of with some iconic hotels and sites.

Advertisement

Netanyahu’s bombs have turned much of this former holiday hotspot into rubble but some Gazans have still defied Trump’s big money takeover.

One restaurant owner, Assad Abu Haseira, promised to start serving dishes at his spot before it is even fully rebuilt, per .

He said: “There is nothing that cannot be repaired.

"Trump says he wants to change the restaurants, and he wants to change Gaza and wants to create a new history for Gaza.

Advertisement

Most read in The Sun

FRESH BLOW
Dancing On Ice star forced to pull out of ITV series after injury
CRASS COMMENT
Gino D’Acampo’s horrifying X-rated comment to Fearne Cotton resurfaces
'SEX CRIMES'
Teacher who starred in hit Channel 4 show charged with string of sex offences
DAD’S HORROR
I placed my dying baby in her dead mum's arms to take last breath together

“We remain Arab and the history of Arabs will not be replaced with the history of foreigners."

This Gazan has not been the only person to show defiance to Trump’s “Riviera of the Middle East” plan.

US military 'to look at all options' in Trump's plan to transform Gaza into 'Middle East Riviera,' Defense Sec vows

Mohammed Abu Haseira vowed to reopen his restaurant and make it “much better than before” while questioning Trump’s narrative that Gaza was a "demolition site”.

He said: "Trump has come up with a decision that he wants to establish restaurants, but the restaurants are here and the hotels are here.

Advertisement

“Why did you destroy them to establish other ones?”

Shocking before and after images have shown the extent of the coastline's destruction.

The Al Salam Abu Haseira fish restaurant by the beach in Gaza City, in 2019Credit: Khalil Hamra / AP Images for NPR
The Al Salam Abu Haseira fish restaurant after it was damaged by an Israeli bombCredit: Omar El Qattaa for NPR
Advertisement
The Aldeira hotel after it was destroyed by bombsCredit: Reuters

The Israeli Defence Forces have claimed that some of these tourist and cultural sites were bombed because they contained terrorist tunnels.

It said: "In response to Hamas' barbaric attacks, the IDF is operating to dismantle Hamas military and administrative capabilities.”

One of these blitzed tourist sites was Pasha’s Palace, where historians claim Napoleon stayed for three nights in 1799 during his military campaign in the area.

Advertisement

The site's beautiful stone walls and the relics that sat inside have been turned to rubble.

Images also showed how the Aldeira hotel, which had been popular among journalists staying reporting in the region, had its doors, windows, and roof blown off.

Other beachfront tourist spots are now a shadow of their past.

Advertisement

The Al Qalaa restaurant, which was back-dropped by the waves of the Mediterranean Sea, has been now been pictured as a skeleton among piles of war rubble and destruction.

A Palestinian man inspects a damaged beachfront wedding hallCredit: Reuters
Gaza's Grand Palace hotel stands ruinedCredit: Reuters
Topics
Advertisement
machibet777.com