Egypt Re-Nominates Aboul Gheit as Arab League Secretary

Secretary-General of Arab League Ahmed Abul Gheit (File Photo: Reuters)
Secretary-General of Arab League Ahmed Abul Gheit (File Photo: Reuters)
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Egypt Re-Nominates Aboul Gheit as Arab League Secretary

Secretary-General of Arab League Ahmed Abul Gheit (File Photo: Reuters)
Secretary-General of Arab League Ahmed Abul Gheit (File Photo: Reuters)

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi announced his country's intention to re-nominate the current Secretary-General of the Arab League for a second term.

The Egyptian presidency issued a statement Saturday announcing that Sisi sent messages to Arab leaders to express Egypt's intention to re-nominate Ahmed Aboul Gheit as the League’s chief for another five years.

The statement indicated that Cairo is looking forward to the leaders' support for this nomination, in accordance with the provisions of the League’s Charter.

The presidency spokesman, Ambassador Bassam Rady, explained that the re-nomination of the Sec-Gen comes within the framework of the great interest that Egypt attaches to the work of the Arab League which serves Arab people.

Sisi is keen to provide all possible support to the organization where Arabs’ aspirations are embodied for a coordinated collective action aimed at serving Arab peoples and interests, according to Rady.

He indicated that this characterized the role of the Secretary-General during his first term of the leadership of the joint Arab action system during a challenging phase in the Arab region.

Aboul Gheit, 78, is the eighth general secretary of the League since its establishment. He began his diplomatic career in the mid-sixties, and held various positions, lastly as Egypt’s Foreign Minister between 2004 and 2011 before he was elected to lead the AL.

Abdul Rahman Azzam was elected as the first general secretary of the university in 1945, and seven Egyptian officials held the same position.

The late Tunisian politician, Chedli Klibi, held the position between 1979 until 1990 following Arab countries' boycott of Egypt after it signed a peace treaty with Israel.



Palestinians Get Food Aid in Central Gaza, Some for the First Time in Months

Donated flour is distributed to Palestinians at a UNRWA center in the Nuseirat refugee camp, Gaza Strip, Tuesday Dec. 3, 2024. (AP)
Donated flour is distributed to Palestinians at a UNRWA center in the Nuseirat refugee camp, Gaza Strip, Tuesday Dec. 3, 2024. (AP)
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Palestinians Get Food Aid in Central Gaza, Some for the First Time in Months

Donated flour is distributed to Palestinians at a UNRWA center in the Nuseirat refugee camp, Gaza Strip, Tuesday Dec. 3, 2024. (AP)
Donated flour is distributed to Palestinians at a UNRWA center in the Nuseirat refugee camp, Gaza Strip, Tuesday Dec. 3, 2024. (AP)

Palestinians lined up for bags of flour distributed by the UN in central Gaza on Tuesday morning, some of them for the first time in months amid a drop in food aid entering the territory.

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, known as UNRWA, gave out one 25-kilogram flour bag (55 pounds) to each family of 10 at a warehouse in the Nuseirat refugee camp, as well as further south in the city of Khan Younis.

Jalal al-Shaer, among the dozens receiving flour at the Nuseirat warehouse, said the bag would last his family of 12 for only two or three days.

“The situation for us is very difficult,” said another man in line, Hammad Moawad. “There is no flour, there is no food, prices are high ... We eat bread crumbs.” He said his family hadn’t received a flour allotment in five or six months.

COGAT, the Israeli army body in charge of humanitarian affairs, said it facilitated entry of a shipment of 600 tons of flour on Sunday for the World Food Program. Still, the amount of aid Israel has allowed into Gaza since the beginning of October has been at nearly the lowest levels of the 15-month-old war.

UNRWA’s senior emergency officer Louise Wateridge told The Associated Press that the flour bags being distributed Tuesday were not enough.

“People are getting one bag of flour between an entire family and there is no certainty when they’ll receive the next food,” she said.

Wateridge added that UNRWA has been struggling like other humanitarian agencies to provide much needed supplies across the Gaza Strip. The agency this week announced it was stopping delivering aid entering through the main crossing from Israel, Kerem Shalom, because its convoys were being robbed by gangs. UNRWA has blamed Israel in large part for the spread of lawlessness in Gaza.

The International Criminal Court is seeking to arrest Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former defense minister over accusations of using “starvation as a method of warfare” by restricting humanitarian aid into Gaza. Israel rejects the allegations and says it has been working hard to improve entry of aid.