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Tuesday, May 26, 2026 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "food supplies" (4 articles)

Jasem Mohamed Albudaiwi (front right), secretary general of the Gulf Cooperation Council, is greeted by Britain's Business Secretary Peter Kyle (centre), British Minister of State for Trade Chris Bryant (behind second left) and Britain's Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Middle East Hamish Falconer (front left) as he arrives at Downing Street in London Wednesday. (AFP)
Qatar

GCC, Britain strike $5bn trade deal

Britain ‌said Wednesday it had secured a trade deal with the ​Gulf Cooperation Council worth $5bn a year in the long run, deepening economic ties ‌with allies in a ⁠region dealing with ‌the fallout from the Iran ‌war. The deal with the GCC, which consists of Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia ⁠and the United Arab Emirates, comes after US-Israeli strikes against Iran in February triggering Iranian attacks on other countries in the region, putting strain on energy and food supplies. "At a time of increased instability, today's announcement sends a clear signal of confidence - giving UK exporters the certainty they need to plan ahead, Britain's Trade Minister Peter Kyle said. The British government said the deal would be ​worth £3.7bn ($4.96bon) each year in the long term, more than double a previous estimate that it would be worth £1.6bn, as the final deal went further on both trade ‌liberalisation and service sector commitments than ⁠previously expected. The deal ​will remove 93% of GCC tariffs on British goods, equivalent to ​the removal of £580mn worth of tariffs by the deal's tenth year, with two-thirds of the tariffs being removed as soon as the deal comes into force. The government said that autos, aerospace, electronics and food and drink would be among the sectors to benefit, with cereals, cheddar cheese, chocolate and butter all becoming tariff-free. In return, Britain has lowered tariffs to the GCC, though the countries' main exports to Britain, oil and gas, are already tariff-free. On services, Britain locked in current access to the GCC so businesses could expand without ‌facing new barriers, while Gulf countries ‌can also grow their own ⁠service sectors through the deal. GCC Secretary-General Jasem Mohamed Albudaiwi said following the signing that ⁠the agreement had a framework ⁠designed to achieve "tangible and measurable" economic benefits for businesses, investors and citizens of the seven signatory countries, according to a statement by the GCC. He said the agreement spans trade in goods and services, financial services, digital trade, investment protection, telecommunications and others. The deal doesn't change or weaken British environmental or data protection standards, and also doesn't contain ​any language around human rights, the UK government said. Some campaigners had warned the British government against ignoring human rights in any deal with the GCC. Tom Wills, director of the Trade Justice Movement said that "by failing to negotiate any enforceable human rights protections within the deal, the UK has taken a moral step backwards." The agreement does contain an investor protection chapter to extend provisions to the three GCC states that weren't previously covered by such treaties and it includes Investor-State Dispute Settlement, ‌a mechanism that Wills ​also criticised for allowing Gulf investors to sue the British government. 

PICTURE: Thajudheen
Qatar

A fruitful Eid: Shelves bursting with plenty

Fruit hampers stacked high at a Doha supermarket tell a reassuring story — Qatar's food supplies remain plentiful and well-stocked as residents prepare to celebrate Eid Al-Fitr, with authorities ensuring uninterrupted delivery of essential goods despite the ongoing regional crisis.  

Gulf Times
Qatar

Qatar, Turkiye send aid shipment to Sudan

Through the partnership between the Qatar Fund for Development (QFFD) and the Turkish Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD), Qatar and Turkiye have dispatched a humanitarian aid vessel carrying 2,428 metric tonnes of assistance to the Sudan. In a statement on Saturday, the QFFD said the maritime shipment includes essential food supplies, clothing, and shelter materials, including tents and blankets, in addition to basic household items. The assistance aims to support the most vulnerable groups and displaced populations affected by the ongoing conflict, food insecurity, and restricted humanitarian access across Sudan.The dispatch ceremony was attended by Abdulaziz al-Hammadi, First Secretary at the Embassy of the State of Qatar in Turkiye; a delegation from the QFFD headed by Yousef al-Mulla, Acting Manager of the Humanitarian Aid Department; and Attila Toros, Governor of Mersin of the Republic of Turkiye; as well as Ali Hamza, Director of AFAD.The statement added these efforts underscore the strength of the bilateral partnership between Qatar and Turkiye in delivering timely, coordinated, and life-saving humanitarian assistance, while reinforcing collective action to address urgent humanitarian needs through a principled and cooperative approach.The QFFD continues its steadfast commitment to alleviating human suffering and supporting affected communities in times of crisis, while contributing to strengthening resilience, peace, and stability in crisis-affected regions. 

Palestinian women and children walk by tents along the wet ground on a rainy day, during a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, in Gaza City.
Region

Gaza’s displaced drenched as first winter storm strikes

Standing in a pool of rainwater that has engulfed her tent and destroyed its contents, the Palestinian Kifah al-Najjar desperately tries to salvage what remains — blankets, mattresses, and food supplies. But the fragile shelter, built from plastic sheets, nylon, and wooden poles atop the ruins of her home in Gaza’s Al Zaytoun neighbourhood, has collapsed under the weight of the storm. With six children and no protection, al-Najjar — whose husband was killed at the start of the war — watches helplessly as her belongings are soaked and scattered. She told Qatar News Agency (QNA) that she had feared this moment long before winter arrived. The tent could not shield them from the summer heat, and now it is drowning them in the cold. The first major weather system to hit Gaza this season brought heavy rain, strong winds, and plunging temperatures, flooding hundreds of tents and worsening the plight of thousands of displaced families. Entire neighbourhoods — Al Zaytoun, Al Daraj, Al Shati Camp, Deir Al Balah, Al Bureij, and Khan Younis’s Al Mawasi — saw shelters submerged, leaving families exposed and desperate. Civil Defence spokesperson Mahmoud Basal said teams are overwhelmed, receiving constant distress calls from camps and shelters but lacking the equipment to respond. Their vehicles and tools were destroyed in the war, leaving them unable to reach those in need. **media[382041]** Gaza’s humanitarian crisis, already dire after the destruction of 92% of its residential buildings, is now compounded by the weather. Thousands of families are living in tents or unstable homes at risk of collapse. Director General of Gaza’s Government Media Office, Dr Ismail al-Thawabta, stated that the Strip urgently needs at least 250,000 tents and 100,000 caravans to provide temporary shelter. After two years of war and suffering, he said, they had hoped a ceasefire would bring relief. However, the occupation’s refusal to allow aid, food, medicine, and shelter materials has kept Gaza trapped in tragedy. As heavy rain lashes Gaza, the suffering of displaced families and residents living among the ruins of destroyed homes deepens, according to municipal spokesperson Hosni Mehanna. He stressed that over 93% of the tents sheltering displaced people are now severely worn after enduring successive seasons of heat and cold. Rainwater has pooled between camps and flooded streets, with no functioning drainage systems to redirect it. Mehanna told Qatar News Agency (QNA) that Gaza’s rainwater networks were systematically destroyed during two years of Israeli aggression, causing sewage to overflow and mix with stormwater sweeping through shelters, wreckage, and displacement camps. Despite having plans to mitigate the impact of winter storms, Gaza Municipality lacks the equipment to implement them due to the deliberate dismantling of its infrastructure, he affirmed. The crisis extends beyond shelter. Makeshift field hospitals and medical tents — set up to replace bombed-out facilities — have collapsed under the storm, halting services. Director of Medical Relief in Gaza, Dr Bassam Zaqout, confirmed that many health and social service points are tents without foundations, now rendered inoperable by the weather. Warning that the storm will have catastrophic consequences for Gaza’s displaced population, UNRWA said in a statement that families are seeking refuge wherever possible, including in temporary tents, and called for urgent permission to deliver shelter supplies already in its possession. Despite the formal end of Israeli aggression, which destroyed 92% of Gaza’s residential buildings, the blockade on essential shelter materials — such as tents and caravans — remains. This has forced families to live in unsafe, collapsing structures or deteriorated tents, risking their lives with every rainfall.