6/12/2024–|Last updated: 12/6/202404:36 PM (Mecca time)
International newspapers highlighted the worsening humanitarian crisis resulting from the ongoing Israeli war on the Gaza Strip, in addition to the rapid developments on the ground in the Syrian file.
The American Wall Street Journal says in a report from within the Netzarim axis, which separates the north and south of the Gaza Strip, that everything there indicates that Israel is planning to control Gaza in the long term.
The newspaper pointed out that “there are two military bases that include mobile shelters, electricity poles, cell communications towers, and even a synagogue,” explaining that Israel leveled the entire area around Netzarim, including villages, streets, and farms.
The Israeli newspaper Haaretz highlighted what it described as a huge database of evidence, which it said was collected by Israeli historian Lee Mordechai, documenting war crimes committed by the Israeli army in the Gaza Strip.
Video clips show – according to the evidence – the behavior of Israeli soldiers in contravention of the norms and laws of war, such as shooting a woman and her son while they were raising a white flag, allowing dogs to eat corpses and photographing them, and enjoying scenes of the killing of Palestinians.
In turn, the American New York Times newspaper said that the number of Gazans with special needs is increasing and their families are suffering, amid the fierce war and the large number of evacuation orders issued by the Israeli army.
The newspaper stated that the suffering of the blind, deaf, and people with physical and cognitive disabilities has been further exacerbated by the severe shortage of capabilities and devices they need, and the damage to roads, sidewalks, and homes with auxiliary features for them.
In the Syrian file, the French website Media Part saw that the fall of the city of Hama to the grip of the Syrian armed opposition forces “brought with it a legend, and carried a special symbolism that was more than 40 years old.”
The website referred to the events of Hama in 1982, in which the regime of the late President Hafez al-Assad killed no less than 20,000 people “in a massacre that he wanted to be a solid example in the memory of every Syrian who thinks about breaking his obedience,” adding that “this myth has fallen today.”
The American Time magazine covered an international report that sheds light on the reality of individual and civil liberties across the world during the current year.
The report draws attention to the role of Gaza in moving the world, noting that the current year was characterized by the fact that solidarity activities with the Palestinians took place everywhere, but they were suppressed, especially in Western countries, through the use of force, as Germany outperformed everyone else in this field.