Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israel not invited to Gaza aid summit in Jordan

U.S. to attend the summit as part of his regional tour.

Blinken Jordan
Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks with Prince Rashid bin El Hassan at a warehouse with humanitarian aid bound for the Gaza Strip, at the Jordanian Hashemite Charity Organization in Amman, April 30, 2024. Photo by Chuck Kennedy/U.S. State Department.

Israel was not invited to Tuesday’s Gaza aid conference in Jordan, an official in Jerusalem’s Foreign Ministry told reporters on Monday.

The conference on the humanitarian response to the Hamas war is being hosted by Jordan, Egypt and the United Nations at a venue on the Jordanian side of the Dead Sea, a few miles from the Israeli border.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is set to attend the summit as part of his regional tour, which included previous stops in Egypt and Israel.

Other confirmed participants include U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Martin Griffiths, Jordanian King Abdullah II, Egyptian President Abdel Fatah el-Sisi and Palestinian Authority chief Mahmoud Abbas.

Representatives of Australia, Cyprus, Indonesia, Japan, Lebanon, Malaysia and Pakistan are also expected to attend.

According to Jordan’s Royal Court, the summit aims to “identify ways to bolster the international community’s response to the humanitarian catastrophe in the Gaza Strip” and seeks “commitment for a collective, coordinated response to address the humanitarian situation.”

Jordan and Israel ended the state of war that existed since 1948 and established diplomatic ties in 1994. However, while the government in Amman maintains relations with Israel, the Jordanian public is deeply hostile, with a majority of the population being Palestinians.

On Nov. 1, Jordan recalled its ambassador to Israel and told Jerusalem not to return its ambassador to Amman. Jordan’s Foreign Ministry said that the move was a protest against the “raging Israeli war on Gaza, which is ... causing an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe.”

The settlement comes after 17 years of litigation tied to hidden Iranian interests in a Manhattan office tower.
“Removing the markings does not erase the impact,” one school principal said.
Legal analysis says a report to the Human Rights Council ignores Hamas’s “openly declared genocidal intent.”
“We don’t have to wait for a mandate from the Department of Justice or the Department of Civil Rights to tell me what needs to be done,” the public school’s president told JNS.
The Israeli prime minister vowed to “safeguard our vital interests under all circumstances.”
The then 28-year-old screamed antisemitic things at a group of Jews and assaulted an Israeli in October 2023, the Manhattan district attorney’s office said at the time.