Abuja, Nigeria – October 3, 2025: President Donald Trump’s 20-point Gaza peace proposal, unveiled alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on September 29, has ignited fierce debate across global capitals and social media platforms. While Western and Arab governments rush to endorse what Trump calls an “extremely fair proposal,” critics across Africa and the Global South are sounding alarms about what they recognize as a familiar imperial script—one that echoes centuries of colonial control disguised as humanitarian intervention.
The plan’s core provisions strip Palestinians of sovereignty while institutionalizing foreign control through what Trump calls a “Board of Peace,” to be chaired by himself and war criminal Tony Blair. Hamas has until October 6 to accept the ultimatum or face Israel’s promise to “finish the job”. As of October 3, Hamas officials indicated they will respond “very soon” but rejected any “take it or leave it” ultimatum.
African Leaders Recognize the Imperial Playbook
The proposal’s neocolonial architecture has not escaped African observers, who see disturbing parallels to their own historical experiences. The African Union, which has consistently supported Palestinian statehood since the 1980s, maintains its position despite Trump’s pressure campaign. South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, who has led African condemnation of Israel’s actions, previously compared Israeli policies to apartheid-era regulations.
Egypt’s Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty warned that the plan contains “many loopholes that need to be closed”, while demanding that Hamas disarm without providing equivalent guarantees for Palestinian security. This echoes historical patterns where colonized peoples were forced to abandon resistance while their occupiers retained military superiority.
The plan’s economic provisions particularly alarm African analysts familiar with structural adjustment programs. Gaza would become a “free trade zone” for foreign investment, with US and Gulf capital extracting natural gas reserves while Palestinians receive menial employment—a model Africa knows intimately from decades of resource extraction without development.
Social Media Erupts with Anti-Imperial Resistance
Across African social media platforms, the Gaza plan has sparked widespread condemnation. Nigerian activists on Twitter compared Trump’s proposal to British colonial policies, while South African users drew parallels to apartheid-era Bantustans—isolated territories designed to contain and control Black populations.
Indonesian and Pakistani social media users have mobilized against their governments’ endorsement of the plan, with critics accusing leaders of “pleasing Washington while undermining Palestine.” African Twitter spaces have hosted discussions linking Palestinian resistance to anti-colonial struggles, emphasizing shared experiences of displacement and foreign control.
Palestinian voices in Gaza express deep skepticism about Trump’s intentions. “We’ve been through hell already,” construction worker Mahmoud Bulbul told international media, yet many Palestinians fear the plan’s economic promises will materialize as “Trump resorts” built on their suffering.
Exposing Western Double Standards and Arab Complicity
The swift endorsement by eight Arab and Muslim nations—including Egypt, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Turkey, Indonesia, and Pakistan—reveals the extent to which regional powers prioritize relationships with Washington over Palestinian self-determination. These governments have effectively legitimized a plan that Palestinians themselves had no role in drafting.
European leaders, meanwhile, demonstrate their characteristic hypocrisy. France’s Emmanuel Macron praised Trump’s “commitment to ending the conflict” while simultaneously recognizing Palestinian statehood—a contradiction that exposes the hollowness of Western diplomatic gestures. Germany’s Friedrich Merz called it “the best plan to end the war” despite the plan’s obvious bias toward Israeli interests.
This Western enthusiasm for a plan that Palestinians reject mirrors historical patterns of imperial powers deciding the fate of colonized peoples without their consent. The proposal’s language of “deradicalization” and creating a “terror-free zone” employs the same civilizational discourse used to justify colonial interventions across Africa and Asia.
The Real Stakes: Sovereignty vs. Imperial Control
Beyond the immediate humanitarian concerns lies a broader question of self-determination that resonates across the African continent. The Trump plan establishes what analysts call “neocolonial rule” disguised as international peacekeeping. Palestinians would lose political agency to foreign-appointed technocrats while Israel retains security control and veto power over withdrawal timelines.
This framework mirrors colonial indirect rule, where local administrators execute policies designed by imperial powers. The International Stabilization Force proposed for Gaza would function as a modern version of colonial police forces—maintaining order for foreign capital while suppressing local resistance.
The plan’s promise of eventual Palestinian statehood rings hollow when compared to similar promises made to African independence movements, which were systematically undermined through economic dependence and political interference. Trump’s proposal offers no guarantees, no timelines, and no mechanisms for Palestinian sovereignty.
As Hamas weighs its response to Trump’s ultimatum, the broader implications extend far beyond Gaza’s borders. The plan represents a test case for whether imperial powers can still impose their will on resistance movements through a combination of military threats and economic incentives. For Africa, watching this unfold evokes painful memories of how liberation movements were pressured to accept compromises that preserved colonial economic structures while granting nominal political independence.
The international community’s response to this plan will signal whether the post-colonial world order still permits such brazen exercises of imperial power, or whether the Global South will finally unite to reject what one Palestinian official called “a Netanyahu agenda articulated by Trump”.