
Six Gaza aid boat activists deported from Israel after three days in detention
Earlier, Israeli human rights group Adalah said they were being transferred to Ben Gurion Airport "after more than 72 hours in Israeli custody following the unlawful interception of the Madleen Freedom Flotilla in international waters".
Adalah, which provided legal advice to the activists, said two others who were on board remained in Israeli custody as they awaited deportation on Friday.
Among those who left on Thursday was Rima Hassan, a French-Palestinian Member of the European Parliament.
In a post on X, the Israeli foreign ministry said: "Six more passengers from the 'selfie yacht,' including Rima Hassan, are on their way out of Israel.
"Bye-bye-and don't forget to take a selfie before you leave," it added.
The post also showed pictures of the activists getting onto and then sitting on a plane.
A post on Hassan's X account said she had left prison and was inviting people to meet in Paris' Place de la République at 21:00 (20:00 BST).
The other five activists being deported are Mark van Rennes from the Netherlands, Suayb Ordu from Turkey, Yasemin Acar from Germany, Thiago Avila from Brazil, and Reva Viard from France, Adalah said.
The rights organisation said the two other people yet to be deported were Pascal Maurieras and journalist Yanis Mhamdi, both French nationals. It said they were still in custody in Givon prison and were expected to be deported on Friday afternoon.
In a statement issued before the six were deported, Adalah said: "While in custody, volunteers were subjected to mistreatment, punitive measures, and aggressive treatment, and two volunteers were held for some period of time in solitary confinement."
It added: "Adalah calls for the immediate release of all eight volunteers and for their safe passage to their home countries. Their continued detention and forced deportation are unlawful and a part of Israel's ongoing violations of international law."
The Israeli foreign ministry previously said those who refused to sign deportation documents would face judicial proceedings to have them deported, in accordance with Israeli law.
Map showing journey of the Madleen yacht from Catania in Italy to where it was intercepted off the coast of Gaza
A group of 12 people had been sailing on the yacht Madleen when it was intercepted by Israeli authorities on Monday, about 185km (115 miles) west of Gaza.
The expedition, organized by the Freedom Flotilla Coalition (FFC), had been aiming to deliver a "symbolic" amount of aid to Gaza in defiance of Israel's blockade and to highlight the humanitarian crisis there.
At the time, the Israeli foreign ministry dismissed it as a "selfie yacht" carrying "less than a single truckload of aid".
Following the activists' detention, four, including Swedish activist Greta Thunberg and two French nationals, agreed to be deported immediately.
Upon her arrival in France, Thunberg accused Israeli authorities of kidnapping her and other activists on the boat while they were in international waters.
Israel's foreign ministry said unauthorised attempts to breach its blockade of Gaza were "dangerous, unlawful, and undermine ongoing humanitarian efforts".
It added that the aid transported on the FFC boat, which included baby formula and medicine, would be transferred to Gaza "through real humanitarian channels".
Elsewhere, activists planning to join a pro-Palestinian march from Egypt to the southern Gaza border were stopped at Cairo airport on Thursday, an organizing group said.
The Global March to Gaza said about 170 people were facing "delays and deportations" at the airport.
"Our legal services are working on these cases, as we have all complied with all the legal requirements of the Egyptian authorities," it said.
Egypt's interior ministry has not commented on the arrests. Its foreign ministry issued a statement on Wednesday saying prior approval by state bodies was required to travel to the Gaza border area.
The march aims to begin from El Arish in northern Egypt on Friday with the aim of arriving at the Egyptian side of the Rafah border with Gaza by Sunday, Global March to Gaza said. The aim is to challenge Israel's blockade of humanitarian aid.
About 1,500 pro-Palestinian protesters have also traveled in a multi-vehicle convoy from Tunisia through to Libya, and were also aiming to enter Egypt to travel onto the Gaza border.
Israel and Egypt have managed a blockade of Gaza since 2007, when Hamas seized control of the territory by ousting its rivals, a year after winning legislative elections.
Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz has called on Egypt to prevent what he called "the arrival of jihadist protesters at the Egypt-Israel border".
Israel stopped all deliveries of humanitarian aid and commercial supplies to Gaza on 2 March and resumed its military offensive two weeks later, collapsing a two-month ceasefire with Hamas.
It said the steps were meant to put pressure on the group to release the hostages still held in Gaza, but the UN warned that Gaza's 2.1 million population were facing catastrophic levels of hunger because of the resulting shortages of food.
Three weeks ago, Israel launched an expanded offensive to take control of all areas of Gaza. It also partially eased the blockade, allowing in a "basic" amount of food.
Israel is now prioritizing distribution through the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which it backs along with the US. The UN and other aid groups are refusing to cooperate with the new system, saying it contravenes the humanitarian principles of neutrality, impartiality, and independence.
It has been 20 months since Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led cross-border attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
At least 55,207 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry. — BBC
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Saudi Gazette
4 hours ago
- Saudi Gazette
Israel advances controversial settlement plan, aiming to ‘bury the idea of a Palestinian state'
TEL AVIV — Israel is moving forward with controversial plans to build thousands of new housing units in the occupied West Bank, splitting the territory in two, a scheme far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said would 'permanently bury the idea of a Palestinian state.' The E1 settlement project, frozen for decades because of vociferous international opposition, would connect Jerusalem to the settlement of Maale Adumim, making a future Palestinian capital in East Jerusalem virtually impossible. It would also split the West Bank in half, preventing the establishment of a contiguous Palestinian state. Smotrich announced the pending approval of 3,401 new housing units on Thursday in a press conference held on the site of the planned construction. 'They will talk about a Palestinian dream, and we will continue to build a Jewish reality,' Smotrich said. 'This reality is what will permanently bury the idea of a Palestinian state, because there is nothing to recognize and no one to recognize.' Final approval for the plan is expected next week. Smotrich has repeatedly lobbied Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to annex the occupied West Bank and apply Israeli sovereignty to the entire territory. In a statement, the presidency of the Palestinian National Council blasted the new settlement plans as a 'systemic plan to steal land, Judaize it, and impose biblical and Talmudic facts on the conflict.' Speaker Rawhi Fattouh said the 'colonial plan falls within the policy of creeping annexation' of the West Bank, which is accompanied by settler violence against Palestinians. Israeli settlements in the West Bank are considered illegal under international law. But during the first Trump administration, the State Department reversed longstanding US policy and ruled settlements were 'not inconsistent' with international law. The Biden administration left this new policy in place. Smotrich announced the advancement of the plan in the press conference on Thursday, presenting it as Israel's response to the recent wave of countries announcing their intention to recognize a Palestinian state. The Israeli settlement watchdog 'Peace Now' blasted the advancement of the E1 plan, deeming it 'deadly for the future of Israel and for any chance of achieving a peaceful two-state solution.' In a statement, it said 'We are standing at the edge of an abyss, and the government is driving us forward at full speed. There is a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and to the terrible war in Gaza — the establishment of a Palestinian state alongside Israel — and it will ultimately come. The government's annexation moves are taking us further away from this solution and guaranteeing many more years of bloodshed.' — CNN


Saudi Gazette
6 hours ago
- Saudi Gazette
Riot police block pro-Palestine protesters from approaching Israeli cruise ship in Greece
ATHENS — Riot police at Greece's largest port cordoned off an area around an Israeli cruise ship that arrived early on Thursday to prevent several hundred protesters from approaching the vessel. Protests have been held at Greek islands and mainland ports along the route of the Crown Iris, several of which have led to clashes with police. At the port of Piraeus near Athens demonstrators held flares and waved Palestinian flags behind a cordon formed with riot police buses. Protest organisers, citing online posts from travellers, said off-duty Israeli soldiers were among the passengers. "They are unwanted here and have no business being here," protest organiser Markos Bekris said. "The blood of innocent people is on their hands and we should not welcome them." Greece is a popular holiday destination for Israelis. But the ongoing Israel-Hamas war in Gaza and global attention about the widespread destruction and severe food shortages have triggered hundreds of anti-Israel protests in Athens and other Greek cities, as well as a political confrontation. Left-wing opposition parties are calling on the conservative government to halt commercial and broad military cooperation with Israel. Demonstrations against Israel's military offensive in Gaza erupted in the city of Volos on Wednesday after the Crown Iris docked there. Local communities unfurled huge Palestinian flags and chanted pro-Palestine slogans as Israeli tourists disembarked from the cruise ship. Last month, the Crown Iris left the Greek island of Syros early without its passengers disembarking after more than 150 protesters demonstrated at the island's port. There have been similar protests at other stops on the Crown Iris' route such as in Rhodes and Crete. However, not all Greeks are on board with the demonstrations, including the country's Health Minister Adonis Georgiadis. "We owe an apology to these friends of Greece who chose to spend their holidays here and were forcibly denied it by some," he wrote on X last month following the incident in Syros. "Our country remains hospitable to all and antisemitism has no place here!" — Euronews


Leaders
7 hours ago
- Leaders
'Do Not Forget Gaza': The Final Will of Anas Al-Sharif
The Palestinian journalist Anas Al-Sharif was killed alongside colleagues Mohammad Qreiqa, Ibrahim Daher, Mohammad Noufal, and Mo'men Al-Aywa in an airstrike that struck a journalists' tent near Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza on August 10, 2025. Al Jazeera and multiple human rights organizations condemned the attack as a 'deliberate assassination' intended to silence those documenting the war's realities. His final will, titled 'Do Not Forget Gaza,' has since become both a testament and a call to memory. Moreover, he called on people to be bridges toward the liberation of the land and its people, and entrusted the care of his family – his daughter Sham, his son Salah, his wife, and his mother – to others Summary of Anas Al-Sharif's Will (Final Message): 'Peace and mercy of God be upon you. I gave all my effort to be a voice for my people from the heart of Gaza. If these words have reached you, know that Israel has killed me and silenced my voice. I urge you not to forget Gaza, and not to forget me in your sincere prayers. I entrust my family to you: my daughter Sham, my son Salah, my mother, and my wife, Umm Salah. Stand by them after I am gone… I pray to God to accept me as a martyr and make my blood a light on the path to freedom.' Video Documenting Dutch Activist Crying A video circulating online shows a Dutch activist visibly overcome with emotion while reading a will aloud. His voice breaks several times as he struggles to continue, wiping away tears. Additionally, the video has been widely shared on Facebook and Instagram, drawing sympathetic comments from viewers. Anas Jamal Mahmoud Al-Sharif (born December 3, 1996, in Jabalia Camp – Gaza) was a prominent Palestinian journalist with Al Jazeera, known for his courageous coverage from the heart of the war in Gaza. Despite 'direct threats from the Israeli army' , Anas continued to convey the truth until his team won the Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Photography in 2024. Related Topics: Canada Airlifts Humanitarian Aid to Gaza Ahead of Plans to Recognize Palestinian State Israel Kills Dozens of Palestinians at Aid Site in Gaza Moroccans Call for End to Gaza War, Reversal of Normalization Deal Trump, Qatari PM to Discuss Gaza Deal at White House Short link : Post Views: 16