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International newspapers continued their interest in the developments of the Israeli war on the Gaza Strip, especially the catastrophic and tragic humanitarian reality it produced, and singled out a space for the files of the region associated with it, in addition to other international issues.
In this context, the French newspaper Le Monde said that “92 people in 24 hours are the outcome of a day of normal terror in the Gaza Strip under the Israeli bombing.”
The newspaper reported that dozens of Palestinians are killed daily under the weight of air strikes since Israel violated the armistice and returned to the war last March.
She added that the repeated arguments of the Israeli army raises the dissatisfaction of the Palestinians and human rights defenders who condemn the Israeli intimidation system, without the slightest consideration of the lives of civilians.
In turn, Axius news website revealed that the former CEO of the World Food Program David Bezley is negotiating with the administration of US President Donald Trump and the Israeli government and other major majority to head a new humanitarian institution in Gaza.
According to the site, Washington, Israel and representatives of the new international establishment are approaching an agreement on how to resume providing aid to Palestinians in Gaza without the control of the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas).
He pointed out that the Trump administration is pressuring countries to donate this new humanitarian mechanism, and demands the United Nations to cooperate with it.
In the Yemeni scene, the Times of Israel quoted an Israeli official as saying that the Trump declaration this week reached his administration to a ceasefire with the Houthis in Yemen, which was surprised by Israeli officials.
Some are concerned about more sudden moves according to this official, while others say we must wait to see how things will go.
In the same regard, the American Wall Street Journal said that shipping companies are still hesitant to return to the Red Sea despite the ceasefire agreement between the United States and the Houthis.
“We will not return soon, and we need large security guarantees in order for the Red Sea to be safe for large commercial ships,” the newspaper quoted a spokesman for the German shipping company Habag Lloyd as saying.
Likewise, the newspaper quoted shipping companies that the region will remain volatile as long as the war continues.
Trump announced last Tuesday that he decided to stop strikes on Yemen in exchange for the Houthis’ commitment to stop targeting ships, which the group considered “victory”, stressing that the agreement with Washington “does not include Israel’s exclusion of operations.”
Economically, the American Washington Times indicated that Trump praises the trade agreement with the United Kingdom, which opens the British market to American agricultural products and other commodities.
According to the newspaper, this agreement may be the first among dozens of promised commercial deals associated with the “Tahrir Day” plan developed by Trump.
She pointed out that the Wall Street markets interacted positively with the agreement, as investors are looking for the White House progress in converting its aggressive customs tactics into better commercial conditions around the world.
Source : American press + Israeli press + French press
