The Israeli attack on the city of Gaza and its repercussions have dominated the interests of global newspapers and websites. A report in the American New York Times indicates that "the intensification of military operations in the city threatens to turn the humanitarian situation into an unprecedented disaster."
Meanwhile, the American Wall Street Journal states, "The phenomenon of supporting Palestinians extends to the world of music."
The New York Times report says, "Field data indicates that hundreds of thousands of civilians are trapped between evacuation orders and airstrikes that do not spare even safe areas."
It adds, "In light of the complete destruction of infrastructure and shortages of food and medicine, the warnings from the United Nations and the Red Cross reflect a clear reality: there is no room for any safe mass displacement, but rather an exacerbation of the humanitarian crisis."
For its part, the French newspaper Le Monde addressed the intensification of the Israeli attack on the city of Gaza, stating that about 70,000 Palestinians fled the city within a week, but those who remained have nowhere to go in a sector where almost all its residents are facing forced displacement.
The newspaper quotes a resident of Gaza City saying, "I have previously suffered the humiliation of displacement, and now my family and I prefer to die in our homes."
The British Guardian reported that more than 7,000 children under the age of five received acute malnutrition recovery programs in clinics run by the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) in the Gaza Strip during just two weeks last month.
According to the newspaper, UNICEF is currently working to compile the total cases for August, which is expected to exceed 15,000 new patients, more than seven times the total number in February.
In Israeli newspapers, Maariv writer Shmuel Rosner stated that "the pro-Israel lobby in Washington has not lost its tools or effectiveness, but it faces a changing American political environment."
He adds that support for Israel in the past was a guaranteed gain with no cost, but today it has become a risky option with the rise of youthful and progressive currents that clearly oppose it.
The writer concludes that "Israel is no longer a consensus issue; it has become a controversial topic that divides American public opinion."
He states, "Jerry Nadler - a seasoned Jewish congressman - ends his career with a cautious stance on arming Israel."
In the same context, the American Wall Street Journal notes that the phenomenon of supporting Palestinians extends to the world of music, as Gaza has become an event that occupies the world of artists, and the war on the besieged sector and the increasing humanitarian losses on the ground create a new situation for artists who have lost fans and gained others due to their sympathy for Gaza.
The newspaper continued that as the war in Gaza approaches its second year, the debate surrounding it has taken center stage in the music scene, with more artists waving Palestinian flags, chanting slogans, or accusing Israel of genocide, while those who remain silent face increasing pressure to choose a side.
I have previously suffered the humiliation of displacement, and now my family and I prefer to die in our homes.





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Global newspapers: Gazans are tired of displacement and their support phenomenon extends to the world of music.