Trump Turnberry vandalised by pro-Palestine group
BBC Scotland News

A pro-Palestinian group undermines Donald Trump’s part of Turnberry Golf Resort in Scotland.
The Palestinian action posted photos on social media showing red paint on a building in Ayrshire course.
The photos show the term “Gaza is not for sale”, sprayed on one green, another that seems to have been dug.
A further photo shows damaged lamp posts at a Trump-owned resort. Scottish police are investigating the incident.
President Trump has attracted widespread international criticism after repeatedly proposing to clear all Palestinian Gaza Strip and turn the area into a resort.
He proposed to own and redevelop the Gaza Strip, after saying Palestinians should move out of the area.
“The United States will take over the Gaza Strip and we will work with it,” Trump said at a joint meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last month.

Trump commented after meeting with the Israeli leader at the White House. Netanyahu replied that the idea was “worthy of attention.”
The U.S. president had previously said neighbors could attract displaced Palestinians from Gaza, a proposal rejected by Arab countries.
The president later Released AI video At his suggestion, Gaza might look like.
Turnberry has been widely rated as Five golf courses in the world.
It has held four open titles, including Tom Watson’s defeat of Jack Nicklaus in 1977 in famously known as “Dull in the Sun.”
But it has not been included in the public timetable since Trump purchased the resort in 2014.

Turnberry Resort underwent a massive renovation in 2014 after purchasing from a Dubai-based company.
It became the organization’s second golf resort in Scotland. Trump International Golf Connection Opens North of Aberdeen in 2012 Years of controversy.
Trump was moved to Scotland to establish a course in honor of his later mother, who was born and raised in Lewis.
The president has been a regular visitor to Scotland for years and was invited to meet last month King Charles of Balmore.
The Palestine operation describes itself as “a network of direct action that dismantles the British apartheid accomplices”.
A statement from the group said: “Palestine’s actions rejected Donald Trump’s treatment of Gaza as if he was a property he liked to dispose of.
“To make it clear that we have shown him that his own property is safe from acts of resistance. We will continue to act on the United States-Israel colonialism in our Palestinian homeland.”
A spokesman for the Scottish Police Department said: “At around 04:40 on Saturday, 8 March 2025, we received a report of damage to the golf course, as well as a house on Maidens Road in Turnberry.”
The troops said the inquiry was in progress.
The Trump Organization has been contacted for comment.