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The 20-Point Gaza Peace Plan: A Letter from Gaza, A Task for Pakistan

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I want to start this one by saying that we, the people outside of Gaza, cannot even begin to fathom what these people have gone through the past 2 years. This is only an attempt to provide a response from their perspective on this Gaza peace plan.

The world is buzzing with all this talk of the ‘peace’ plan. In Washington, London, and Tel Aviv, they are calling it a “historic breakthrough.” A “20-point plan,” freshly printed and announced under flashing cameras by President Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu, promises an end to the war and a new future for Gaza.

Diplomats will issue statements. Analysts will fill hours of airtime. But here at RazaRants.com, we believe the most important analysis comes not from a pristine television studio, but from the dust and rubble of Gaza itself. What does this plan mean to a person whose entire reality has been shaped by siege, war, and occupation?

First, let’s listen to that voice. A voice pieced together from the shared sentiment of a people who have learned to read the fine print on every promise. Then, and only then, can we discuss the crucial role Pakistan must play.

Part 1: The View from Gaza – Our Response to Your ‘Peace’

You have presented us with 20 points. We have 60,000+ reasons to be skeptical. But let us look at your plan.

1: The Ceasefire & Hostages

2: Demilitarization and Amnesty

3: Governance and Redevelopment

On the Long-Term Vision

We have read your 20 points. They are points of surrender, not peace. They are designed to manage the occupation, not end it.

Part 2: Pakistan’s Moral Imperative – Demand a Just Peace

So, what should Pakistan do? The government faces a critical choice. An outright rejection, while emotionally satisfying, will see us dismissed as rejectionists. Outright acceptance would be a betrayal of the highest order.

The only path forward is assertive, principled diplomacy. Pakistan must lead the OIC and the wider Muslim world not in rejecting the plan, but in demanding its fundamental renegotiation. Here is what Pakistan’s counter-proposal should focus on:

1. Demand True Sovereignty:

Pakistan must insist that any future Palestinian state has all the attributes of sovereignty. This includes control over its own borders (including the Allenby Bridge and Gaza’s crossings), its airspace, and its territorial waters. A state that cannot control who and what comes in or out is not a state.

2. Jerusalem is a Red Line:

The “Trump Board” is a non-starter. Pakistan must be unequivocal: a viable two-state solution is impossible without East Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine, in line with decades of international law and UN Security Council resolutions. This is non-negotiable.

3. Champion Genuine Self-Determination:

Instead of an appointed committee of technocrats, Pakistan must demand a clear, internationally supervised timeline for free and fair Palestinian elections in both the West Bank and Gaza. Let the Palestinians choose their own leaders, whoever they may be.

4. Uphold the Right of Return:

The issue of Palestinian refugees cannot be swept under the rug. Pakistan must insist that UN Resolution 194, which affirms the right of refugees to return, remains a cornerstone of any final status negotiations. This is a matter of justice, not charity.

5. Economic Justice, Not Economic Control:

The economic plan must be delinked from political surrender. Pakistan should advocate for a framework that gives Palestinians control over their own economic assets—from the gas fields off Gaza’s coast to trade and customs revenue. The goal should be economic independence, not donor-dependent servitude.

Here is another blog on Gaza situation.

Conclusion: The Time for Action is Now

The Trump-Netanyahu plan, as it stands, is an insult to the intelligence and resilience of the Palestinian people. It offers a gilded cage and calls it a state.

Pakistan has long been a vocal supporter of the Palestinian cause. But words are no longer enough. Now is the time for bold, strategic action. The government must leverage its diplomatic capital in Washington, Beijing, Riyadh, and Ankara to build a coalition that can force a renegotiation.

We cannot accept a peace plan written by the occupier for the occupied. Pakistan has the opportunity and the duty to help write a new chapter—one based on justice, equality, and true freedom for the Palestinian people.

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