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Israel intercepts aid flotilla as status of one ship remains unclear | |
(about 7 hours later) | |
Activists from Global Sumud flotilla including Greta Thunberg arrested as final boat is presumed intercepted in Palestinian waters | |
Israel has said it has stopped a pro-Palestinian flotilla carrying aid from reaching Gaza after its navy intercepted all but one of its vessels trying to breach the blockade. | |
The status of the final boat remained unclear on Thursday evening but it appeared likely to also have been stopped by the Israelis. | |
Earlier the Israeli foreign ministry, describing the flotilla’s mission as a provocation, said “all passengers are safe and in good health” and that “they are being safely transported to Israel, and from there they will be deported to Europe”. | |
Vessels from the Global Sumud flotilla, which consisted of more than 40 civilian boats carrying about 500 parliamentarians, lawyers and activists including the Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg, were boarded late on Wednesday by Israeli forces about 75 miles off the coast of Gaza. | |
The goal of the flotilla, which was carrying symbolic humanitarian aid, was to breach the Gaza blockade and establish a maritime corridor into Gaza. | |
A video from the Israeli foreign ministry showed Thunberg sitting on a deck surrounded by soldiers on the flotilla’s lead vessel, the Alma. | A video from the Israeli foreign ministry showed Thunberg sitting on a deck surrounded by soldiers on the flotilla’s lead vessel, the Alma. |
In a video posted on Instagram shortly before the interception, Thunberg said: “My name is Greta Thunberg. I am onboard the ship Alma. We are about to be intercepted by Israel.” | |
Thunberg and other activists were arrested and taken into custody at the Israeli port of Ashdod. | Thunberg and other activists were arrested and taken into custody at the Israeli port of Ashdod. |
While some of the vessels were boarded by Israeli soldiers, others sailed on towards the Gaza Strip before being intercepted. | |
It was the first time since Israel imposed a naval blockade on Gaza’s waters in 2009 that an unauthorised humanitarian mission has reached closer than 70 nautical miles from the territory. | |
The flotilla put out several videos on Telegram with messages from individuals onboard the various boats, some holding their passports, stating that they had been abducted and taken to Israel against their will and reiterating that their mission was a non-violent humanitarian cause. | |
Footage broadcast by Sky Italia showed activists on deck being hit by powerful jets of water. Those onboard said they heard loud bangs near several of the boats, believed to be stun grenades dropped from drones. | |
One boat, the Mikeno, was reported to have escaped the maritime blockade and to have stopped inside Palestinian territorial waters near Gaza’s coast before contact with the vessel was lost. | |
The fate of the Mikeno is unclear. According to the live tracker, the boat was “presumed intercepted”. | |
Crew members on other vessels in the flotilla said they received a radio message from the Mikeno in which the ship’s captain declared: “We see land.” | |
Ramazan Tunç, a member of the Turkish delegation of the flotilla, told Anadolu news agency that the Mikeno had entered Gaza’s territorial waters, thereby breaking the blockade. “I want to share with you the joy that we have managed to bring our ship into Gaza,” he said, describing it as an achievement that many had deemed impossible under the heavy restrictions imposed by land and sea. | |
The vessel was reported to be idling about 9 nautical miles off Gaza, where it had been stationary for some time before reportedly being intercepted. | |
Some activists later claimed in press statements that the Mikeno had come under attack by Israeli naval forces after crossing into Gaza’s waters. However, no official confirmation of such an incident has been issued by the flotilla’s organisers. | |
The Israeli foreign ministry confirmed that “one last boat of the provocation remains in the distance”. It added: “If it approaches, its attempt to enter an active combat zone and break the blockade will also be prevented.” | |
Members of the flotilla will be handed over to the police before being transferred to Ketziot prison, a large facility in the Negev desert. Those who refuse deportation will be tried by a special court of interior ministry officials, rather than a regular court, for illegal entry. | |
Those arrested include nine Irish citizens, including the Sinn Féin senator Chris Andrews, at least two Italian MPs, the French MEP Emma Fourreau and a former RAF captain, Malcolm Ducker, 72, who piloted one of the flotilla’s vessels, called All In. | |
In a phone interview with the Guardian, Ducker’s daughter, Clare Azzougarh, said she was concerned about her father being detained in Ketziot, also known as Ansar III, a high-security prison used primarily to hold Palestinian security prisoners, many of whom Israel accuses of involvement in militant or terrorist activities. | |
“Early in the morning I saw the video of the Israeli commandos coming on to the boat to arrest the members of my father’s boat all and that’s the last I saw him,” Azzougarh said. ‘‘My dad joined the flotilla because he was so upset and frustrated about what was happening in Gaza and seeing that no government or international community was really going to take any meaningful action and he couldn’t stand to see all the death, but crucially all the children being starved, and felt that he had to do something.” | |
She added: “I’m very very impressed with how he handled himself yesterday. I know it’s the honour of his lifetime to serve in this mission. He wanted to uphold international law because it’s an illegal blockade.” | |
Spontaneous protests broke out across Italy in response to the raid. Protests were also reported in Brussel, Athens, Buenos Aires and Berlin, while the Spanish government called on Israel to protect the safety and rights of activists. | Spontaneous protests broke out across Italy in response to the raid. Protests were also reported in Brussel, Athens, Buenos Aires and Berlin, while the Spanish government called on Israel to protect the safety and rights of activists. |
Spain’s labour minister and deputy prime minister, Yolanda Díaz, described the attack on the flotilla as “a crime against international law” and demanded that Israel immediately release those it had detained. Writing on Bluesky, she said: “The EU needs to break off relations with Israel right now.” | |
The British government was “very concerned” about Israel’s interception of an international aid flotilla bound for Gaza, the Foreign Office said on Thursday, adding that it had made clear to Israel that the situation should be resolved safely. | The British government was “very concerned” about Israel’s interception of an international aid flotilla bound for Gaza, the Foreign Office said on Thursday, adding that it had made clear to Israel that the situation should be resolved safely. |
Turkey’s foreign ministry said the Israeli “attack” on the flotilla was “an act of terror” that endangered the lives of civilians. | |
Israel imposed the naval blockade in 2009, an intensification of its 2007 blockade of Gaza in response to Hamas seizing control of the territory. The UN has condemned the blockade on numerous occasions, calling it “a direct contravention of international human rights and humanitarian law”. | |
The flotilla argued it was a civilian, unarmed group and that the passage of humanitarian aid was guaranteed in international law. | |
Previous attempts by activists to break the naval blockade on Gaza were stopped by force by the Israeli military. In 2010, 10 Turkish activists were killed by Israeli commandos who raided the Mavi Marmara ship as it led an aid flotilla towards Gaza. | |
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