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Israel deports Greta Thunberg after intercepting Gaza-bound aid boat

Israel deports Greta Thunberg after intercepting Gaza-bound aid boat

Japan Timesa day ago

Campaigner Greta Thunberg arrived home in Sweden late Tuesday, after Israel detained her and other activists aboard a Gaza-bound aid boat and deported some.
Of the 12 activists on board the Madleen, which was carrying food and supplies for Gaza, four including Thunberg agreed to be deported immediately, while all of them have been banned from Israel for 100 years, the rights group that legally represents some of them said in a statement.
The remaining eight were taken into custody after they refused to leave Israel voluntarily, and brought before a detention review tribunal on Tuesday, rights group Adalah said.
"The state asked the tribunal to keep the activists in custody until their deportation," Adalah said, adding that under Israeli law, individuals under deportation orders can be held for 72 hours before forcible removal.
Israeli forces intercepted the boat, operated by the Freedom Flotilla Coalition, in international waters on Monday and towed it to the port of Ashdod.
They then transferred them to Ben Gurion airport near Tel Aviv, the foreign ministry said, from where Thunberg flew first to France then Sweden.
Thunberg, 22, accused Israel of "kidnapping us in international waters and taking us against our will to Israel."
"This is yet another intentional violation of rights that is added to the list of countless other violations that Israel is committing," she said at Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris.
Asked on arrival in Stockholm if she was scared when Israeli security forces boarded the sailboat, Thunberg replied: "What I'm afraid of is that people are silent during an ongoing genocide."
Four French activists who were also aboard the Madleen were set to face an Israeli judge, French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said.
He had earlier posted on X that five would face court action and only one would depart voluntarily.
Barrot told reporters that French diplomats had met with the six French nationals in Israel, and that French-Palestinian European MP Rima Hassan was among those who refused to leave voluntarily.
The activists, from France, Germany, Brazil, Turkey, Sweden, Spain and the Netherlands, aimed to deliver humanitarian aid and break the Israeli blockade on the Palestinian territory.
In what organizers called a "symbolic act," hundreds of participants in a land convoy crossed the border into Libya from Tunisia with the aim of reaching Gaza, whose entire population the U.N. has warned is at risk of famine.
Israel's interception of the Madleen, about 185 kilometers west of Gaza, was condemned by Turkey as a "heinous attack," while Iran denounced it as "a form of piracy" in international waters.
In May, another Freedom Flotilla ship, the Conscience, was damaged in international waters off Malta as it headed to Gaza, with the activists blaming an Israeli drone attack.
A 2010 Israeli commando raid on the Turkish ship Mavi Marmara, which was part of a similar attempt to breach the naval blockade of Gaza, left 10 civilians dead.
On Sunday, Defense Minister Israel Katz said the blockade, in place since well before the Israel-Hamas war, was needed to prevent Palestinian militants from importing weapons.
Israel is facing mounting pressure to allow more aid into Gaza to alleviate widespread shortages of food and basic supplies.
Israel recently allowed some deliveries to resume after barring them for more than two months and began working with the newly formed, U.S.-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
But humanitarian agencies have criticized the GHF and the United Nations refuses to work with it, citing concerns over its practices and neutrality.
Dozens of people have been killed near GHF distribution points since late May, according to Gaza's civil defense agency.
The U.N.'s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), said on Tuesday that in Gaza's north, "Israeli military operations have intensified in recent days, with mass casualties reported."
An independent United Nations commission said on Tuesday that Israeli attacks on schools, religious and cultural sites in Gaza amount to war crimes and the crime against humanity of seeking to exterminate Palestinians.
"In killing civilians sheltering in schools and religious sites, Israeli security forces committed the crime against humanity of extermination," the U.N. Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory said in a report.
AFP has contacted Israeli authorities for comment on the report but has yet to receive a response.
The Israeli military said it intercepted a projectile on Tuesday that had entered Israeli airspace from Gaza.
It later called for residents to evacuate several neighborhoods in the north of the Palestinian territory.
The Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas attack that triggered the war resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people on the Israeli side, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of official figures.
The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza says at least 54,981 people, the majority civilians, have been killed in the territory since the start of the war. The U.N. considers these figures reliable.
Out of 251 taken hostage during the Hamas attack, 54 are still held in Gaza including 32 the Israeli military says are dead.

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Israel appears ready to attack Iran, officials in U.S. and Europe say
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Israel appears ready to attack Iran, officials in U.S. and Europe say

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US Slams UN Conference on Israel-Palestinian Issue, Warns of Consequences
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Yomiuri Shimbun

time9 hours ago

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US Slams UN Conference on Israel-Palestinian Issue, Warns of Consequences

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U.S. slams U.N. conference on Israel-Palestinian issue and warns of consequences
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Japan Times

time11 hours ago

  • Japan Times

U.S. slams U.N. conference on Israel-Palestinian issue and warns of consequences

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