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Israel Launches New Ground Operation in Northern Gaza Amid Renewed Hamas Activity
Israel’s military has intensified operations in northern Gaza, specifically encircling Jabalya, after detecting signs of Hamas attempting to rebuild its operational capabilities despite a year of conflict and airstrikes. The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) have launched a new ground offensive, focusing on dismantling Hamas in the area, a location previously declared cleared of the group.
The military’s decision to renew operations in Jabalya follows reports of Hamas members resurfacing in the area. The IDF has confirmed that it carried out extensive airstrikes on Saturday night, targeting weapons storage facilities, underground infrastructure, and Hamas cells across northern Gaza. This escalation comes at a time when attention has also shifted to Israel’s military actions against Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Jabalya, home to Gaza’s largest refugee camp, has once again become a focal point of the Israeli military operation. The camp, densely populated with displaced Palestinians, was one of the first sites attacked in Israel’s response to Hamas’ October 7 attacks last year. Over the weekend, families were seen evacuating Jabalya, responding to fresh warnings from the Israeli military about the ground operation.
Residents are struggling to find safety as evacuation orders are issued, but many are choosing to stay, citing that there is no truly safe place left in Gaza. Mohammad Ibrahim, a 36-year-old resident of Jabalya, told CNN, “I, along with my two sons, have stayed in Jabalya and will not go anywhere. There is no safe place in Gaza, and death is the same here or there.”
In addition to the ground offensive, at least 25 civilians were killed in Israeli airstrikes on a mosque and a school in central Gaza, hospital officials confirmed. According to witnesses, the mosque was being used as a shelter for displaced families. Nabil Nadda, who was nearby when the strike occurred, described the devastation: “The mosque was a shelter for displaced people, there are no militants or anything inside.”
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EU Must End ‘Naivety’ on Trade and Confront China’s Industrial Strategy, Says French Minister
France’s Minister for Foreign Trade, Nicolas Forissier, has called on the European Union to abandon what he described as “naivety” in its approach to global trade, urging a tougher stance on countries accused of distorting markets through industrial policy and trade practices.
Speaking in an interview with Euronews’ 12 Minutes With programme, Forissier said Europe must respond more firmly to what he described as the weaponisation of trade dependencies, warning that China in particular could damage its own long-term interests by undermining European industry.
“The Chinese have to understand that they won’t win anything if they destroy the European industry and then the European market, which is an essential market for them,” he said. “We must no longer be naive.”
His comments come as the European Commission prepares to hold an “orientation debate” next week on how to respond to a surge of low-cost Chinese imports. The discussion is expected to shape possible new trade defence measures, with further talks likely when EU leaders meet in Brussels in mid-June.
Forissier said the shift in thinking was not limited to China alone but applied to any country using commercial leverage to gain strategic advantage. “It is not only China,” he said. “It is all the countries that weaponise trade.”
Among the proposals under consideration is a requirement for EU companies to diversify supply chains, sourcing components from at least three different suppliers in order to reduce dependency on any single foreign market. Asked whether he supported such a measure, Forissier replied: “Yes, we have to.”
Other options include targeted tariffs on sensitive industries such as chemicals, alongside stronger use of anti-dumping and anti-subsidy tools to counter imports priced below domestic market levels. These measures are designed to address concerns over overcapacity in China’s industrial sector and its impact on European manufacturers.
The debate is taking place against a backdrop of widening trade imbalances. EU goods imports from China exceeded exports by €359.3 billion in 2025, marking an increase of nearly 20% compared with the previous year.
China has already warned it could retaliate if the bloc imposes new restrictions, raising concerns about potential escalation in trade tensions between two of the world’s largest economies.
France has repeatedly pushed for a more assertive European trade policy, arguing that state subsidies, export controls on raw materials and industrial overproduction in major economies are distorting global markets.
Forissier stressed that Europe must maintain open dialogue with Beijing while defending its own industrial base. “We try to respect the Chinese,” he said. “The Chinese have to respect us, and this is the message European institutions have to send.”
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