Gaza Reconstruction Plan: Palestinian PM Mohammad Mustafa Unveils First Arab-Backed Recovery Blueprint

 


Gaza Reconstruction Plan: Palestinian PM Mohammad Mustafa Unveils First Arab-Backed Recovery Blueprint

Jerusalem / Cairo, October 16, 2025
At a detailed policy briefing covered by N18G, Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa unveiled his government’s comprehensive Gaza Reconstruction Plan, calling it “the first Palestinian-led, Arab-backed, and internationally supported roadmap for rebuilding Gaza.”


Core of the Reconstruction Strategy

At the heart of the plan lies the Gaza Recovery and Reconstruction Implementation Program (GRRIP), which draws from the Arab Plan for Recovery and Development of Gaza endorsed at the Extraordinary Arab Summit in Cairo earlier this year.

The program prioritizes the rebuilding of homes, hospitals, schools, and essential infrastructure, alongside job creation, institutional reforms, and the restoration of unified Palestinian governance.
According to Mustafa, “this is not merely about rebuilding structures, but about restoring dignity, stability, and national unity across Gaza and the West Bank.”


Economic Scale and Key Partners

Mustafa announced that Egypt will host a high-level Gaza Reconstruction Conference in November 2025, co-organized by the Palestinian Authority, the United Nations, and the World Bank, to mobilize international financing.

The first six-month phase of the recovery program is estimated at USD 30 billion, with major funding expected from Arab states, the European Union, China, and Gulf donors.


Political and Security Framework

Mustafa underscored that “Gaza’s rebuilding must begin with national legitimacy and unified institutions.”

This principle, he noted, aligns with the Israel-Hamas ceasefire agreement brokered under former U.S. President Donald Trump’s peace roadmap. The reconstruction blueprint envisions a new administrative mechanism excluding Hamas, supported by a multinational stabilization force to secure rebuilding sites and maintain public order.


Broader Objectives

Calling the reconstruction effort a “humanitarian and national responsibility rather than a political prize,” Mustafa vowed that the rebuilding process would reinforce Palestinian self-determination and prevent further displacement.

He affirmed that the initiative would be guided by UN resolutions and the New York Declaration on Palestine’s Reconstruction, linking short-term recovery to the long-term vision of an independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital.


Conclusion

The Gaza Reconstruction Plan represents a historic shift in post-war governance — from externally dictated aid to Palestinian-driven recovery. Beyond humanitarian relief, it signals an attempt to align economic revival, institutional reform, and regional diplomacy toward a sustainable peace and the realization of Palestine’s long-delayed statehood aspirations.




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