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In The News

Worldcrunch Magazine #47 — Dark Summer

August 28 - September 3, 2023

Worldcrunch Magazine #47 — Dark Summer
Worldcrunch

Here's the latest edition of Worldcrunch Magazine, a selection of our best articles of the week from top international journalists, produced exclusively in English for Worldcrunch readers.

>> DISCOVER IT HERE <<

This week's cover story, by Esther Cabezas, for Spanish online newspaper El Diario, looks into what the living conditions are like for Ibiza's seasonal workers. Cabezas interviews three people, Victoria, Mohammed and Wilson, all who have endured various types of hardship and harsh living conditions while working in Ibiza during the Summer.

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Table of Contents

Prigozhin’s Death, A Perfect Consolidation Of Power For Putin | Les Echos By Benjamin Quénelle

How The Moscow Drone Attacks Are Targeting Putin’s Inner Circle | Worldcrunch By Cameron Manley

How The Greek Shipping Industry Is Cashing In On Putin’s War | Welt By Carolina Drüten

Why China’s Faltering Economy Is Such Bad News For The Global South | Clarín By Marcelo Cantelmi

Inside The Harsh Living Conditions Of Ibiza’s Seasonal Workers | El Diario By Esther Cabezas

Why Summer Should Always Remind Us Of The Ozone | Ethic By Mariana Toro Nader

The Rubiales Kiss & 11 Other Cases Of Football’s Machismo Problem | La Marea By Óscar F. Civieta

Interracial Relationships: Love & Affection — Privilege & Prejudice | Azmina By Jade Santana and Ayme Brito

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Exclusive coverage from the world's top sources, in English for the first time.

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The Endless War

Inside Israel's Plans To Transfer Palestinians From Gaza To Egypt's Sinai

Dubbed by some as the 'Eiland plan,' after a retired Israel general, Egypt is vehemently opposed to any attempt to transfer Palestinian refugees from Gaza, which could turn Sinai into a launch pad for operations against Israel, and ultimately redraw the map of the Middle East again.

Inside Israel's Plans To Transfer Palestinians From Gaza To Egypt's Sinai

Palestinians at the Rafah border crossing in the southern Gaza Strip.

Lina Attalah

-Analysis-

CAIRO — On October 24, a document leaked from Israeli Intelligence Minister Gila Gamliel detailed that a durable post-war solution for Gaza has to include the transfer of Palestinians to Sinai, Egypt. According to the document obtained by the Israeli Calcalist news website, the move would include three steps: Establishing tent cities in Sinai, creating a humanitarian corridor, and constructing cities in North Sinai for the new refugees. In addition, “a sterile zone” several kilometers wide would be established in Egypt south of the border with Israel to prevent Palestinians from returning.

The ministry, according to observers, doesn’t have a strong weight in government, with intelligence apparatuses operating outside its framework. “The existence of the document and the formal idea is not a surprise. But that it is leaked and the proof it is out there, is interesting,” says Daniel Levy, president of the London-based Middle East Project and former peace negotiator with Israeli Prime Ministers Ehud Barak and Yitzhak Rabin.

Shortly before that, on October 18, President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi delivered an improvised speech about the ongoing Israeli military assault against the Gaza Strip that followed Hamas’ incursion into Israel nearly two weeks earlier.

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“Transferring [Palestinian] refugees from the Gaza Strip to Sinai would simply amount to relocating their resistance… turning Sinai into a launch pad for operations against Israel and granting Israel the right to defend itself and its national security by conducting strikes on Egyptian land in retaliation.”

Sisi’s vehement rejection of a “second nakba,” especially after U.S.-led diplomatic efforts to pressure Egypt to create a humanitarian corridor, was turned into a quest to elicit public support for his government. With less than a month to go before a presidential election that was hastily announced amid a crippling economic crisis, Sisi then called for popular demonstrations to support his position. His appeal resulted in a few thousand people turning out for protests on October 20, primarily in Cairo.

Sisi’s position is also consistent with a stance long held by previous Egyptian rulers who have historically rejected any Israeli attempts to displace Palestinians into Sinai. Whether or not Israel’s current military campaign against Gaza succeeds in making the relocation plan a fait accompli is yet to be determined.

Against this backdrop, Egyptian media outlets, owned by security apparatuses close to Sisi, have been publishing and airing detailed reports about an earlier Israeli blueprint to relocate Palestinians from Gaza to the Sinai Peninsula. Most of them claim to have revealed what they call the “Eiland plan,” named after a retired major general, Giora Eiland, who served as the head of the Israeli National Security Council between 2004 and 2006. State-aligned media have made sure to highlight Sisi’s uncompromising opposition to the plan, even if it includes offers for debt relief or financial aid packages from the Joe Biden administration.

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