Category: World

  • Israel begins deporting Flotilla activists

    Israel begins deporting Flotilla activists

    Israel has begun deporting the pro-Palestinian activists it took into custody following the storming of an aid flotilla in international water heading to the Gaza Strip over the weekend.

    All 679 detainees taken off the ships, including some 40 Britons, are being deported within the next 48 hours. However, around 50 of the protesters will be held for questioning.

    Some 120 activists have already been bussed to the Jordanian border, where they were greeted by sympathisers. One Briton involved in the flotilla arrived back in Britain on Tuesday night.

    British Foreign Secretary William Hague said 31 British nationals and a further 11 with dual nationality are known to have been detained.

    At least nine pro-Palestinian activists were killed when Israeli commandos raided a six ship convoy on Monday.

    The raid has led to worldwide condemnation of Israel and to calls for its controversial blockade of the Gaza Strip to be lifted.

    ITN

  • Finland summons Israeli envoy

    Finland summons Israeli envoy

    Finland has summoned the Israeli ambassador to condemn a brutal attack on the Freedom Flotilla carrying aid for the Palestinians under siege in the Gaza Strip.

    State Secretary at the Finnish Foreign Ministry Pertti Torstila conveyed Finland’s “disappointment and concern over the increased spiral of violence in the volatile area” to Israeli ambassador to Helsinki Avi Granot.

    “Finland condemns the violent interception of the Gaza-bound aid flotilla on international waters and does not accept the disproportionate use of force against civilians,” AFP reported the Finnish Foreign Ministry as saying in a statement on Tuesday.

    Finland also called for “a reliable and thorough investigation” into the fatal incident by an “independent party.”

    The condemnation comes one day after Israeli commandos launched a pre-dawn assault on the six-ship aid convoy in international waters in the Mediterranean Sea, at least 150km (90 miles) off the coast of Gaza.

    The Freedom Flotilla was carrying more than 10,000 tons of humanitarian aid to the impoverished Gaza Strip, where a years-long Israeli siege has pushed the people on the verge of starvation.

    RB/CS/MMN

    Press TV

  • UN condemns Israel’s deadly raid on blockade-busting aid convoy as British relatives face anxious wait for news

    UN condemns Israel’s deadly raid on blockade-busting aid convoy as British relatives face anxious wait for news

  • United Nations calls for impartial investigation
  • One Briton injured – 28 believed to be on flotilla
  • Israel: This was not a successful operation
  • Turkey accuses Israel of ‘state terrorism’
  • The United Nations Security Council today condemned Israel’s bloody commando raid on the Gaza flotilla and which left up to 19 dead and called for an impartial investigation into the incident.

    In a statement released after a marathon 12-hour session, the body attacked ‘those acts’ which resulted in the loss of life.

    But it stopped short of naming Israel outright, a move designed to placate the country’s closest ally the United States.

    The statement, which called for ‘a prompt, impartial, credible and transparent investigation, is unlikely to assuage Turkey.

    Ankara had used some of the harshest language against the Jewish state for launching the raid against the flotilla, which included a Turkish ferry on which the pro-Palestinian activists were killed.

    Turkey’s Foreign Minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, whose country drafted the initial presidential statement, called the Israeli raid ‘banditry and piracy’ on the high seas and ‘murder conducted by a state’.

    The United Nations Security Council today condemned Israel’s bloody commando raid on the Gaza flotilla and which left up to 19 dead and called for an impartial investigation into the incident.Outcry: Thousands of pro-Palestinian supporters gather outside Downing Street to protest against the the flotilla raid

    In a statement released after a marathon 12-hour session, the body attacked ‘those acts’ which resulted in the loss of life.

    But it stopped short of naming Israel outright, a move designed to placate the country’s closest ally the United States.

    The statement, which called for ‘a prompt, impartial, credible and transparent investigation, is unlikely to assuage Turkey.

    Ankara had used some of the harshest language against the Jewish state for launching the raid against the flotilla, which included a Turkish ferry on which the pro-Palestinian activists were killed.

    Turkey’s Foreign Minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, whose country drafted the initial presidential statement, called the Israeli raid ‘banditry and piracy’ on the high seas and ‘murder conducted by a state’.

    The United Nations Security Council today condemned Israel’s bloody commando raid on the Gaza flotilla and which left up to 19 dead and called for an impartial investigation into the incident.

    In a statement released after a marathon 12-hour session, the body attacked ‘those acts’ which resulted in the loss of life.

    But it stopped short of naming Israel outright, a move designed to placate the country’s closest ally the United States.

    The statement, which called for ‘a prompt, impartial, credible and transparent investigation, is unlikely to assuage Turkey.

    Ankara had used some of the harshest language against the Jewish state for launching the raid against the flotilla, which included a Turkish ferry on which the pro-Palestinian activists were killed.

    Protest: Riot police officers blockade the road leading to the Israeli embassy in London

    Turkey’s Foreign Minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, whose country drafted the initial presidential statement, called the Israeli raid ‘banditry and piracy’ on the high seas and ‘murder conducted by a state’.

    The incident happened in international waters and worldwide condemnation of Israel was swift.

    Former British ambassador to the UN Sir Jeremy Greenstock said there had been ‘immediate international rage’ following the ‘unnecessary loss of life’.

    He said that Israel had to make sure weapons were not getting into Gaza ‘so some kind of defence is necessary but this was clearly not very well handled’.

    Sir Jeremy added: ‘It’s past time by some years for serious international action to end the blockade and the virtual starvation of Gaza.

    ‘This is not going to work as a way of dealing with the Palestinian territories over the long term.

    ‘It’s not going to work, frankly, for a democratic and law-abiding nation such as Israel – it’s changing the character of Israel to be responsible for this kind of occupation for so long.

    ‘And to my mind, this situation is just not necessary as it stands at the moment.’

    The All-Party Parliamentary Group on Conflict Issues said the flotilla raid had caused ‘indescribable pain” to the families of those killed and “provoked anger around the world’.

    Taksim

    The three MPs co-chairing the group – Liberal Democrat Simon Hughes, Labour’s John McDonnell, and Conservative Gary Streeter – released a statement urging all sides to renounce violence.

    They said: ‘As long as this long-running dispute remains unresolved, we fear that many more lives will be lost on all sides, resulting in even more pain and further deepening the hatred and distrust between all those involved.

    ‘Conflict resolution has been successfully used to end conflict in other parts of the world – now it’s time for the Israel-Palestine conflict to be resolved, for good.’

    Turkey, from where most of the dead are said to come, accused Israel of ‘state terrorism’ and withdrew its ambassador to Tel Aviv.

    Tens of thousands marched through Istanbul and attempted to storm the Israeli consulate, chanting: ‘ Murderous Israel, you will drown in the blood you shed.’

    Deputy prime minister Bulent Arinc called Israel’s actions ‘piracy’ and cancelled three planned joint military exercises.

    Foreign Secretary William Hague ‘deplored the loss of life’ and asked for access to the British involved, while David Cameron branded the attack ‘unacceptable’.

    The deadly clash sparked a wave of furious condemnation of Israel – with 2,000 demonstrators outside the gates of Downing Street and thousands more outside the Israeli Embassy in West London.

    In Paris, hundreds clashed with police near the Israeli Embassy. Police responded by firing tear gas.

    The White House, which has close ties with both Israel and Turkey, expressed ‘deep regret at the loss of life in today’s incident, and concern for the wounded’.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu cancelled a trip to Washington planned for today to head home as the crisis erupted.

    He expressed his ‘full backing’ for the military action.Israeli soldier

    Earlier, the UN said it was ‘shocked’ by the violence. Following a 90-minute open meeting, the Security Council went into closed-door consultations. Diplomats said envoys were haggling over the text of a proposed statement by the council, a task that dragged on into the evening.

    Many council members criticized the Israeli action with varying degrees of vehemence, and said it was time for Israel’s three-year-old blockade of Hamas-controlled Gaza to be lifted.

    ‘This is tantamount to banditry and piracy,’ Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told the council. ‘It is murder conducted by a state.’

    The Jewish state argues that the blockade, which began in 2007, is necessary to prevent arms reaching the Hamas-controlled enclave.

    The high-profile aid mission – unofficially supported by Turkey – set off from Cyprus on Sunday, led by the Turkish passenger ferry the Mavi Marmara, with 500 people aboard and 10,000 tons of food, medicines and building materials.

    There were two other passenger ships – one Irish and one Swedish – and three cargo ships thought to be all Turkish. After warnings from Israel to turn back, they were intercepted before dawn yesterday by three warships about 40 miles from Gaza, still within international waters.

    Commandos launched their raid on the Marmara by helicopter, slipping down a rope to the top deck. Greta Berlin, a founder of the Free Gaza Movement and one of the organisers of the flotilla, claimed the marines fired indiscriminately at unarmed civilians.

    ‘We are all civilians,’ she said. ‘Every one of us is a civilian who is trying to break Israel’s blockade of one and a half million Palestinians.’

    Israel raid

    Audrey Bomse, another spokesman for the movement, told the BBC: ‘We were not going to pose any violent resistance.’

    However the Israeli Defence Force posted a video on the internet site YouTube of footage taken from the helicopter which it claimed showed its soldiers being attacked as they landed.

    Defence Minister Ehud Barak said the commandos had orders to use ‘minimum force’ to commandeer the vessels, and met only token resistance on the other five ships.Angry Islamic protesters try to pass a barricade during a demonstration in Istanbu

    But he said the forces were ‘ambushed’ on the Mavi Marmara by protesters using ‘extreme violence’ with weapons including two pistols, knives and iron bars.

    The commandeered ships were brought several hours later into the port of Ashdod, where passengers were given the option of being voluntarily deported or arrested and taken to Israeli prisons.

    There was a communications blackout, with the surviving protesters’ satellite phones being confiscated, making it impossible to hear their version of events.

    The Daily Mail

  • Turkey calls Israel a ‘terrorist’ over Gaza ship deaths

    Turkey calls Israel a ‘terrorist’ over Gaza ship deaths

    Turkey has warned that its relationship with Israel has been severely damaged after at least nine people died when troops stormed ships trying to break the Gaza blockade.

    The Turkish government has long been Israel’s main regional ally but called the raid an act of state terrorism and has accused Israel of violating international law.

    Jonathan Head reports.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10199824, 31 May 2010

  • Israel’s biggest enemy is itself

    Israel’s biggest enemy is itself

    by Flying Rodent

    Jesus facepalming Christ. Let’s say you were a cartoonish, Ahmadinejadesque lunatic fixated on destroying Israel.

    How would you go about achieving your goal?

    Well, priority number one would be to isolate the Israelis from their allies, so they have no diplomatic or military cover.

    A good start would be to take actions that infuriate military partners like the Turks by killing a load of Turkish civvies, then telling them to fuck off by pretending that the civvies you killed deserved it.

    You’d definitely want to sabotage relations with allies like Greece, so that they’d withdraw from joint military operations and bar your military leaders from the country.

    You’d want to blacken the Israelis’ image by finding as much video footage as possible of exploded children and Merkava tanks doing donuts in the rubble of civilian housing, preferably from insane, murderous, indefensible and counterproductive wars.

    You’d want to rile up Israel’s enemies by marching the Israeli military into conflicts in Lebanon that they can’t win so that they look much weaker than they are, and you’d want to destroy the reputation of Israel’s special forces. At least since the raid on Entebbe, Israeli special forces have looked courageous and invincible – getting some good footage of them blowing away a load of civvies in a clusterfuck operation would be propaganda gold.

    Plus, you’d want to isolate the country from the United States by blowing up a load of pointless political pissfights that gain Israel nothing and damage its supporters as badly as possible.

    The Israelis don’t need the US to give them every item of military hardware excepting nukes and aircraft carriers, but trying to fund that stuff out of general taxation rather getting them for free would be much more difficult.

    In short, you’d want to make Israel look like a paranoid, bloodthirsty and extremely belligerent nation of racist freaks, determined to murder fuck out of civilians with total impunity year-in, year-out, so that the entire planet disowns them by, for example, withdrawing their ambassadors and issuing a barrage of denuncations.

    This, I contend, is the actual policy of the Israeli political class, and I’m now certain that the Israeli government is packed to the hoop with Iranian sleeper agents.

    Short of handing Syrian intelligence the launch codes to their nuclear arsenal, I really can’t think of any way in which the Israeli political class could do their country more harm.

    It’s been clear for years that the Israeli right is utterly dependent on the looniest fringe of Palestinian society for their power and legitimacy, and that both sets of nutters use violence against the other as a means to cementing their rule.

    The basic situation over there is that both Hamas and the Israeli government are committed to policies that harm their populations but ensure their own continued rule. It’s a godawful, mutual death spiral that’s heading in precisely the wrong direction.

    Shorter – there really is an urgent and perilous threat to Israel. It’s called “the Israeli government”.

    , May 31, 2010

  • Israel is isolated by world condemnation after attack on aid flotilla

    Israel is isolated by world condemnation after attack on aid flotilla

    By Claire Smith and Mark Smith

    THE international community united in condemning Israel yesterday following an attack on an aid flotilla bound for the blockaded Gaza Strip that left at least ten people dead.

    Pakistani demonstrator
    A Pakistani demonstrator shouts slogans during a protest against Israel. Picture: Getty

    Spontaneous protests erupted across Europe and the Middle East, as US president Barack Obama expressed “deep regret” over the massacre.

    Israeli forces stormed the convoy of six ships carrying aid yesterday in a pre-dawn raid that saw commandos abseiling on to a boat and shooting dead pro-Palestinian aid volunteers.

    Four Scots were believed to be among at least 27 Britons on board the flotilla. Their fate was unknown last night, although the Foreign Office said no Britons were among the dead. Israel said its forces were forced to respond to “unexpected resistance” as they boarded the vessels, but one Scottish witness said the Israelis had faced no resistance.

    Mr Obama demanded emergency talks with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu last night, as planned peace talks were cancelled. Foreign Secretary William Hague led the worldwide chorus of condemnation, saying: “I deplore the loss of life during the interception of the Gaza flotilla. Our embassy is in urgent contact with the Israeli government.”

    Calling for an urgent lifting of an Israeli blockade on Gaza, Mr Hague added: “The closure of Gaza is unacceptable and counter-productive.

    “There can be no better response from the international community to this tragedy than to achieve urgently a durable resolution to the Gaza crisis.”

    He revealed that at least one Briton was among the injured as he demanded access to 16 UK citizens being held by the Israelis.

    International leaders condemned the raid, while Greece, Egypt, Sweden, Spain and Denmark summoned Israel’s ambassadors, demanding explanations for the violence.

    Spain and France issued statements decrying the “disproportionate use of force”, while Greece suspended a military exercise with Israel and postponed a visit by Israel’s air force chief.

    UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon said: “It is vital that there is a full investigation to determine exactly how this bloodshed took place.

    “I believe Israel must urgently provide a full explanation.”

    Mr Netanyahu expressed “regret” for the loss of life. but said the soldiers had no choice.

    “Our soldiers had to defend themselves, defend their lives, or they would have been killed,” he said. Israel said it opened fire after its commandos were attacked with knives, clubs and live fire from two pistols wrested from soldiers after they descended from a helicopter to board one of the vessels.

    Night-vision footage released by the Israeli military showed soldiers dropping from a helicopter one by one and being grabbed by men wielding sticks on the lead boat, the Turkish-flagged Mavi Marmara.

    The soldiers fell to the deck, where the men continued to beat them and dumped one of them from the top deck.

    Five Israeli soldiers were wounded, two seriously, including at least one hit by live fire, the army said. Two of the dead activists had fired at soldiers with pistols, the Israeli army said.

    “They planned this attack,” said Israeli military spokeswoman Lieutenant Colonel Avital Leibovitch. “Our soldiers were injured from these knives and sharp metal objects … as well as from live fire.”

    The ships were being towed to the Israeli port of Ashdod, and the wounded were evacuated by helicopter to Israeli hospitals, Israeli officials said last night. One of the ships had reached port by midday yesterday.

    There were no details on the identities of the casualties, or on the conditions of some of the more prominent people on board, including 1976 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Mairead Corrigan Maguire from Northern Ireland and Holocaust survivor Hedy Epstein, 85.

    In Turkey, which unofficially sponsored the aid mission, 10,000 protesters converged on Taksim Square in central Istanbul last night to voice anger at Israel’s use of force against an aid convoy with many of their countrymen aboard. Most of the dead are believed to be Turkish.

    Smaller protests erupted in capitals across the Middle East, Europe and South Asia.

    Several hundred people protested outside Downing Street in London to denounce Israel after the deadly raid. Chanting “Free Palestine” and brandishing banners condemning Israeli “war crimes”, activists blocked Whitehall as they staged an angry but peaceful demonstration.

    In Scotland, emergency protests were staged in Edinburgh’s Princes Street, outside the Caledonian Hotel, and Glasgow’s George Square. Smaller protests were staged in Dundee, Aberdeen and Inverness.

    A national demonstration will take place on Saturday at the Mound in Edinburgh.

    Veteran pro-Palestinian campaigner George Galloway described the operation as “a murderous act of piracy”.

    The family of one of the Scots on board, Dr Hasan Nowarah, 45, from Glasgow, were desperately trying to contact him last night.

    His wife Seonaig said: “We are just absolutely shocked and the problem is not knowing anything is really, really difficult.

    “I haven’t spoken to Hasan since he left Crete four days ago. I have been in touch with the Foreign Office, but no-one seems to know anything.”

    Theresa McDermott, 43, a post office worker from Edinburgh, was also on board. Her friend Carl Abernethy said:

    “It is very worrying.

    “The last I heard was that they were 65km from land, safely in international waters and they were going to wait until daylight to see if they could get to Gaza.”

    Mark Lazarowicz, Ms McDermott’s MP in Edinburgh North and Leith, said: “She is a very brave woman, an ordinary post office worker who just felt she had to do something about the injustice in Gaza.

    “I have been in touch with the Foreign Office, asking that they demand her release immediately.”

    Ali El Awaisi, 21, a history and politics student from Dundee, who is from a Palestinian family, was on his first aid mission abroad.

    His brother Khaled said: “They didn’t have any guns or any arms, they were searched in Turkey. They were not allowed to have anything on board.

    “I said to him: ‘What if the Israelis attack?’ He said they were planning to resist in as peaceful way as possible.”

    Deputy First Minister Nicola Sturgeon condemned the attack and expressed her concern for the Scots involved last night.

    She said: “My primary concern is for the safety of the Scots on board. The Israeli government must provide immediate reassurance of their well-being.

    “This violence against a humanitarian convoy is rightly condemned across the world and demonstrates the need for Israel to lift the blockade.”

    , 01 June 2010