Breaking the Gaza Blockade

by Heritage | August 23, 2008 at 03:45 am
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Israel warns boat-borne activists

Israel warns boat-borne activists

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Update: The "Free Gaza and Liberty" human rights boats are leaving Gaza. They are carrying several Palestinians. It is unclear what action Israel will take.

   GAZA, Aug. 28 (Xinhua) -- Two  boats carrying International pro-Palestinian activists will leave Gaza for Cyprus on Thursday, together with several stranded students and patients aboard.

Among the Palestinian passengers, who have been denied Israeli exit visas, are Said Mosleh, a 10-year-old boy who lost a leg to an Israeli tank shell, his father, and five members of the Darwish family who plan to join relatives in Cyprus.

"I can't believe we're finally able to leave for medical treatment," stated Khaled Mosleh. "We will break the blockade so my son can get a prothesis."



The Free Gaza protest group held a press conference on Wednesday to make their plans public.


The Free Gaza Movement held a press conference in Gaza City Wednesday to announce that the two boats which arrived in Gaza Port on Saturday via carrying several dozen mostly Western activists will leave on Thursday carrying with it Palestinian students with valid foreign visas or dual citizenships who have been accepted to study abroad, a Palestinian professor returning to teach in Europe, and a young woman who will meet her husband abroad, the Jerusalem Post reported.

It was unclear whether Israeli authorities would order the boats stopped and searched, wanting to avoid a media feeding frenzy. The activists reject Israel's right to stop the boats.




Two restored fishing boats carrying 40 members of the US-based Free Gaza protest group are heading towards Gaza's territorial waters in an attempt to break the Israeli blockade of the Palestinian territory.


Israel has said that "all options" were being considered to prevent the protest, delivery of 200 hearing aids and 5000 balloons.

Video: Pro-Palestinian Activists Sail Into Gaza

Video: News Conference- Gaza boat- Free Gaza.Org

Cartoon: Breaking the Siege

Update: The vessels have arrived safely in Gaza. The Israeli government decided to play nice and avoid a potential PR disaster.

The Palestinians in Gaza don't get many visitors. That's because the Israelis have imposed an air, land and sea blockade since 2007 when Islamic militants seized control of the coastal strip on the Mediterranean, making it impossible for friends to just drop by. So when two vessels loaded with 46 peace activists arrived on Saturday, thousands of Palestinians lined the harbor in a party mood. Fishing scows honked their foghorns and swarms of kids swam out to the arriving boats just as the sun was turning the water to molten reds and gold.

Death treats, Israeli spies and even a mysterious drowning have marred the preparation for this protest.


The activists, who hail from 14 countries, said that before they even set sail, they faced anonymous death threats, the mysterious drowning of one potential sponsor, and constant badgering by Israeli spies badly disguised as guitar-strumming hippies. "They kept popping up, everywhere," said Angela Godfrey-Goldstein, an organizer. "They were really annoying."

Time reports that, a "bizarre" communication blackout caused by lsraeli electronic jamming prevented the boats from meeting a ship of journalists. 

The efforts that the Israeli government has taken to stop and limit media coverage of two aging fishing boats and their aging peacenik crews from taking this action, shows that such actions are worthwhile.

Sadly there was only one Israeli aboard.

As Jeff Halper, the sole Israeli aboard the "Free Gaza" flotilla, says: "We didn't have anybody famous. It was old-fashioned 'people power.' We just wanted to show what happens when ordinary people from around the world get together to try breaking this immoral siege on Gaza."

Once at sea, the activists — who include an 81-year old nun, a Greek leftist parliamentarian and the sister-in law of ex-British Prime Minister Tony Blair — braved a squall and a bizarre communications blackout, which they say was caused by lsraeli electronic jamming, and which thwarted a rendezvous in heaving seas between peace activists and a ship of journalists.


Below is a statement from the US-based Free Gaza protest group.

Any action designed to harm civilians constitutes collective punishment (in the Palestinians’ case, for voting the “wrong” way) and is both illegal under international law and profoundly immoral.


Our mission is to expose the illegality of Israel’s actions, and to break through the siege in order to express our solidarity with the suffering people of Gaza (and of the occupied Palestinian territory as a whole) and to create a free and regular channel between Gaza and the outside world.

Original Story:

Israel warns boat-borne activists

Two vessels left Cyprus for the 30-hour journey to the Gaza Strip [AFP]

Israel has issued a tough warning to members of the Free Gaza protest group not to break the Israeli blockade of the Palestinian territory.

Two vessels carrying about 40 members of the US-based group, including an 81-year-old Catholic, were expected to arrive in Gaza on Saturday.

But Israel's foreign ministry said it was closely monitoring the 70-foot Free Gaza and 60-foot Liberty boats left the Cypriot port of Larnaca on Friday.

"We will make sure that this provocation is not taking place," Aviv Shiron, a spokesman for Israel's foreign ministry, said.

He said that "all options" were being considered to prevent the protest.

Good progress

A Jerusalem-based spokeswoman for the group said early on Saturday that the two converted fshing boats were just hours away from entering Gaza's territorial waters.

"They are out there. They are two hours away from the point they were aiming for before they enter Gaza territorial waters," Angela  Godfrey-Goldstein said.

"They made very good progress for the night and everyone is fine," she said, although co-ordinators on land were having problems communicating with the boats via on-board satellite phones.

Several dozen people, mostly reporters, gathered at Gaza City's main port to await the arrival of the boats, which are sailing under Greek flags.

Al Jazeera's Ashrif Amritti, reporting from Gaza Strip, said that Palestinian vessels would attempt to travel out to sea to meet the activists.

The activists plan to deliver 200 hearing aids to a Palestinian charity for children and hand out 5,000 balloons.

Activists 'excited'

Before setting sail from Larnaca on Friday they said that they hoped other groups would follow their example.

The activists are delivering hearing aids and balloons [AFP]

"I've been nervous, but today I'm excited,'' said Lauren Booth, 41, an activist and sister-in-law of Tony Blair, the former British prime minister.

"It's not about our fear, it's about the people waiting in Gaza, you can't think about anything else."

Paul Larudee, a Free Gaza organizer, said it was "highly unlikely" that the Israeli navy would fire on the boats to stop them.

But he said the group expects Israeli authorities to intercept the boats and arrest those onboard.

Israeli blockade

Israel imposed the blockade after Hamas seized full control of Gaza in June 2007 after routing security forces loyal to Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president.

Gaza's 1.4 million Palestinians are already largely confined to their narrow strip of land by Israeli and Egyptian border closures.

"Israel has an obligation towards the Palestinian people, being the occupying power," Eyad al-Saraj of the International Campaign to End the Siege said.

"Gaza has a collapsed economy, it is seriously deprived, dependent on charity ... unemployment is very high. The place is desparate, the people are desparate because this is really a kind of prison," he told Al Jazeera.

A trickle of people are still allowed to leave for medical care, jobs abroad and for the
annual Muslim pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia.

Israel and Hamas have observed a fragile truce since June.

recommend This comment thread is now closed
Paschen
Paschen
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 06:15 on August 23rd, 2008

Heritage, I like this story. It's good stuff.


Great Post.

0
Heritage

Thanks Paschen.

Latest reports say the Israelis have decided to allow the boats to land. A very wise decision on their part I think.

This small, peaceful protest against the brutal collective punishment being inflicted upon the people in Gaza, has increased international awareness of the situation. Respect to the courageous people on those boats.

Sources in Jerusalem advised Saturday afternoon that Israel had made the decision to allow the two boats containing a group of pro-Palestinians peace activists to dock in the Gaza Strip, according to Army Radio.

Until this point Israel had refused to allow the entry to the Free Gaza activist group, warning against the mission and calling it an unacceptable provocation.

Army Radio also reported that the activists had regained communications they had accused Israel of sabotaging.

A total of 46 members of the US-based group were on the boats, hoping to reach the shores of Gaza with a delivery of humanitarian goods for Palestinians.


0
Heritage

Here's a related story from NowPublic's Sameh Habeeb who reports from Gaza City, Gaza Strip,

Gazans live back in the Middle Ages

The suffering and the torture could be a reason for nation's collapse or fall down. However, it could be a way to achieve victory or some of its commencements. I always gather my ideas to penetrate this suffering to tell the story of my people through my words.


I having nothing but a strong will to write and tell the untold story of my people in the besieged Gaza strip. I truly became addicted on reporting daily sufferings encountered by 1.5 million besieged in Gaza, the New Biggest Concentration Camp!

0
IsraeliLawStudent

Let us not forget that Israel has the right to defend itself against Gaza's government-controlled terrorist infrastructure (Hamas), and that despite being constantly attacked, continues to provide power, taxes, and more to the hostile territory. Every time Israel has agreed to a cease-fire, Hamas takes the opportunity to stockpile more weapons and Al Qaida gains momentum in the region.

0
Heritage

Yes, Israel has the right to defend itself, but does it have the right to collectively punish 1.5 million people?  Do your law studies include the Geneva Convention?

The Fourth Geneva Convention (or GCIV) relates to the protection of civilians during times of war "in the hands" of an enemy and under any military occupation by a foreign power.

Under the 1949 Geneva Conventions collective punishments are a war crime.

Collective punishments


Article 33. No protected person may be punished for an offence he or she has not personally committed.

It's so ironic  that the drafters of the Geneva Conventions wrote the section on Collective Punishments with Nazi attrocites in mind.

The medieval siege is creating conditions that could cause Gazans to turn to Al Qaida.  I  still have memories of Saddam being linked to Al  Qaida in order to justify war. The linking of Hamas and Al Qaida is all too convenient for me. I don't buy it.

0
Paschen

Things always go both ways, don't they? If Israel as a given right so does Palestine and vice versa. 

Israel took territories from Palestinian so they have now the right to do the same, take those territories back and defend them self. Israel its Politics is one of the main reasons we do have terrorist and unrest.


0
IsraeliLawStudent

Paschen - Israel never took territories on their own volition. The arab armies forced them into war...  Israel does not fire rockets against innocent children, women and men.

0
Heritage

"Israel does not fire rockets against innocent children, women and men."


This comment shows great disrespect to hundreds of Palestinians, many of them women and children, who have been killed by the IDF this year.


Why is it that with all of the IDFs high tech military hardware, smart bombs, apache attack helicopters etc are so many civilians being killed?


Further, your comment ignores admissions by the IDF that it does fire rockets against children:

When asked to explain the death of nearly 550 Palestinian children and minors by the Israeli army during the past 44 months, Dotan said the deaths were “accidental, collateral but not deliberate”.


However, when further pressed to explain how the Israeli army decided to drop one-tonne bombs on apartment buildings in Gaza and carry out devastating air strikes targeting markets and crowded streets, killing scores of children and women, Dotan invoked the mantra of terror.


“Yes, we knew there were children, but we had to kill the terrorists.”


Like other Israeli officials and spokespersons, Dotan believe that these actions were justified so as to protect Israeli lives.

0
Paschen

With this reasoning, i am not surprised that they can be no peace in Palestine nor Israel.

And Yes Israel does Kill Innocent Children,  Woman and Men.... I have seen some of Israel great warring with my own eyes! Some of Israel's Leader and Officers should be broth before the International court for crimes against Humanity and crimes of war and much more, and so should some Palestinian leader as well though.

politisite
politisite
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 09:27 on August 24th, 2008

Heritage, I like this story. It's good stuff.  Good synopsis

0
René

So what are they going to do with 5.000 balloons?

0
Heritage

Hi Rene,

Good question! I was wondering about that myself. Probably just give them to kids.


0
Paschen

It is a symbol and a message. 

0
Paschen

Here is another article on that issue that may be of interest.

http://english.aljazeera.net/focus/palestine/2008/08/20088245204163878.html

It is a good Article I think.

0
Heritage

Thanks Paschen..... very good article

Barry Artiste
Barry Artiste
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 07:45 on August 25th, 2008

Heritage, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Milieunet
Milieunet
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 22:03 on August 25th, 2008

Heritage, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Rhonda J Mangus
Rhonda J Mangus
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 18:23 on August 28th, 2008

Heritage, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Amy Judd
Amy Judd
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 18:35 on August 28th, 2008

Heritage, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Thanks for staying on top of this story

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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