logo
Freedom Flotilla Coalition gives update on Madleen crew detained by Israel

Freedom Flotilla Coalition gives update on Madleen crew detained by Israel

The Nationala day ago

The Madleen was boarded and seized by Israeli forces in international waters early on Monday morning, after crews sounded an alarm after seeing multiple vessels approach and reporting drones spraying a white "irritant" substance on board.
The boat arrived in Ashdod port in Israel late on Monday evening, with Israel's foreign ministry attempting to depict the mission as a publicity stunt, branding the Madleen a "celebrity yacht".
READ MORE: 20 more Palestinians killed and hundreds injured by Israel near aid points
On Tuesday, the Freedom Flotilla Coalition (FFC) – the humanitarian organisation behind the Madleen – confirmed that four of the 12 activists have been deported, while eight remain in Israeli detention.
The crew members were all asked to sign documents consenting to deportation, which the coalition said was under the guise that they had entered Israel illegally.
One of those still in detention is Rima Hassan, a French-Palestinian Member of the European Parliament.
Earlier on Tuesday, Israel said that Swedish climate and social justice campaigner Greta Thunberg had been deported and had been placed on a flight from Ben Gurion Airport to Paris.
The current condition of the 12 Madleen crew members is as follows:
Baptiste Andre (France) – Deported
Greta Thunberg (Sweden) – Deported
Sergio Toribio (Spain) – Deported
Suayb Ordu (Turkey) – Detained
Mark van Rennes (The Netherlands) – Detained
Pascal Maurieras (France) – Detained
Reva Viard (France) – Detained
Rima Hassan (France) – Detained
Thiago Avila (Brazil) – Detained
Yanis Mhamdi (France) – Detained
Yasemin Acar (Germany) – Detained
Omar Faiad (France) – Deported
The FFC confirmed that lawyers from human rights organisation Adalah were able to meet with 10 of the 12 crew members approximately 24 hours after the Madleen was intercepted by Israel.
Al Jazeera journalist Omar Faiad is represented separately through legal counsel arranged by his network, while French journalist Yanis Mhamdi is represented by private counsel.
A statement from the group reads: "Israel is handling the custody of all 12 as though they had entered illegally– even though they were forcibly abducted from international waters and brought into Israel against their will.
READ MORE: 'Matter of urgency': Call for David Lammy to protect Madleen crew
"Each of the volunteers was given two options: sign documents consenting to deportation, or remain in detention and appear before a tribunal. The FFC had encouraged some volunteers, if given the option, to agree to expedited deportation in order to restore access to communication – including the ability to speak freely and advocate for their fellow participants.
"All of them explicitly disputed the claim of unlawful entry in writing, affirming that Israeli law does not apply to them, that their mission was humanitarian in nature, and that both the boat's interception and their detention are illegal."
The FFC added that those who refused to sign the deportation documents remain in detention and will appear before a tribunal.
The group continued: "Legal counsel will argue that the interception was unlawful, the detentions arbitrary, and that the volunteers must be released without deportation. The legal team will continue to demand that the volunteers be allowed to return to the Madleen and resume their lawful mission to Gaza.
"However, we know all too well that there is no justice to be found in Israel's legal system, which functions primarily to legitimise and entrench colonization, occupation, and apartheid."
The statement added: "The FFC stands with the Madleen 12. Their detention is unlawful, politically motivated, and a direct violation of international law. The persecution of humanitarian action and the silencing of resistance will not succeed.
"The FFC acknowledges that by virtue of their passports of privilege, the Madleen 12 are shielded from the daily brutality and horrendous systemic torture Palestinians endure under Israeli occupation."
The group pointed towards evidence from the Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, a Palestinian NGO, which has said that as of June 4, there are more than 10,4000 Palestinians held captive in Israeli dungeons.
The FFC said that of those, "more than 400 are children and more than 3500 are held without trial, charge, or minimal due process".

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US criticises UK for sanctions on extremist Israeli ministers
US criticises UK for sanctions on extremist Israeli ministers

The National

timean hour ago

  • The National

US criticises UK for sanctions on extremist Israeli ministers

Trump's secretary of state Marco Rubio said that the travel ban and asset freeze imposed on Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich 'do not advance US-led efforts to achieve a ceasefire' and called for the measures to be reversed. The UK is taking the action alongside Australia, Canada, New Zealand and Norway. Rubio said that the US 'stands shoulder-to-shoulder' with Israel. READ MORE: UK must do 'far more' than sanctions and stop all arms sales to Israel UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy said on Tuesday that the ministers had been 'inciting violence against Palestinian people for months and months and months, they have been encouraging egregious abuses of human rights'. In a post on Twitter/X, Rubio said that the 'United States condemns the sanctions imposed by the governments of United Kingdom, Canada, Norway, New Zealand, and Australia on two sitting members of the Israeli cabinet. These sanctions do not advance US-led efforts to achieve a ceasefire, bring all hostages home, and end the war.' He went on to say that America reminds 'our partners not to forget who the real enemy is'. 'The United States urges the reversal of the sanctions and stands shoulder-to-shoulder with Israel.' Itamar Ben-Gvir (left) and Bezalel Smotrich (Image: Getty Images) The sanctions against Israel's security and finance ministers were announced on Tuesday. Smotrich and Ben-Gvir are both considered far-right extremists, but are in government as they help to prop up Benjamin Netanyahu's fragile coalition government. Smotrich has campaigned against allowing aid into Gaza, and also supported the expansion of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, which are considered illegal under international law. Meanwhile, Ben-Gvir has called for Gaza's people to be resettled from the territory. In a joint statement with the foreign ministers of the other nations who also imposed sanctions, Lammy said that the two sanctioned ministers had incited 'serious abuses of Palestinian human rights' and described their actions as 'not acceptable'. READ MORE: Independent Scotland under SNP would break ties with Israel, says Stephen Flynn The statement added: 'We will strive to achieve an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, the immediate release of the remaining hostages by Hamas which can have no future role in the governance of Gaza, a surge in aid and a path to a two-state solution.' Downing Street said that the two men had been sanctioned in their 'personal capacities' and not 'their ministries and departments'. 'As the Israeli ambassador to the UK has said in recent interviews, their statements in their ministerial capacities do not even represent government policy,' a Number 10 spokesman said. The UK and other allies have upped pressure on Israel in recent weeks, amid aid shortages in Gaza and suggestions a large-scale offensive could be launched into the territory. It has been reported that only scarce amounts of aid is making it into the hands of people, and the slow flow of food and medicines has prompted warnings of famine and starvation. Netanyahu is wanted for arrest by the International Criminal Court for alleged crimes against humanity.

Greta Thunberg's angry reaction when she is asked about some of 'freedom flotilla' group's support for Hamas and Hezbollah - as she is welcomed by crowd chanting 'Free Palestine' after deportation from Israel
Greta Thunberg's angry reaction when she is asked about some of 'freedom flotilla' group's support for Hamas and Hezbollah - as she is welcomed by crowd chanting 'Free Palestine' after deportation from Israel

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Greta Thunberg's angry reaction when she is asked about some of 'freedom flotilla' group's support for Hamas and Hezbollah - as she is welcomed by crowd chanting 'Free Palestine' after deportation from Israel

Greta Thunberg said last night that she was not aware that some of those involved in the 'freedom flotilla' voyage had previously shown support for Hamas and Hezbollah. 'I haven't heard about it or what this person has said,' the 22-year-old activist told Swedish media as she landed back in her home country. When asked why she did not know about the views of people she was travelling with, she said: 'Because I haven't had a phone.' She was then challenged by reporters who asked why she had not looked into the issue before she set off on the ship bound for Gaza. 'Should I ask exactly everyone what exactly they have said about everything?' she then asked curtly. 'It would take some time.' Zaher Birawi, who organised the mission on the British-flagged ship, was accused of being a 'Hamas operative' by Labour MP Christian Wakefield in 2023. Birawi, who is based in London and describes himself as a 'founding member' of the Freedom Flotilla International Coalition, has also been labelled as such by Israel. He is the head of the Europal Forum, which Israel designated as a terrorist organisation in 2021, and has previously been pictured with Ismail Haniyeh, the former Hamas leader who was assassinated by Israel last year. Meanwhile an activist who travelled on the Madleen aid boat, Brazilian national Thiago Avila, reportedly attended Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah's funeral in Beirut last year, and wrote on social media that he was 'inspired' by the Lebanese terrorist chief. Thunberg's comments came as she landed in Sweden last night after being deported from Israel. She was welcomed at Arlanda Airport in Stockholm by crowds waving Palestinian flags, who presented her with flowers and a keffiyeh scarf as they shouted 'free Palestine!' Of the 12 activists on board the Madleen, 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 added. Thunberg yesterday vowed to return to the country despite the restrictions apparently placed on her. The group had set sail towards Gaza carrying what they called a symbolic amount of aid, before being intercepted by Israeli forces in international waters off the coast of Egypt early Monday. They were then taken to the port of Ashdod, where Thunberg was detained before being placed on a flight to France on Tuesday morning. Asked in Stockholm if she was scared when the security forces boarded the Madleen sailboat, Thunberg replied: 'What I'm afraid of is that people are silent during an ongoing genocide.' 'What I feel most is concern for the continued violations of international law and war crimes that Israel is guilty of.' She accused Israel of carrying out a 'systematic genocide' and 'systematic starvation of over two million people' in Gaza. Swedish activist Greta Thunberg (R) arrives at Arlanda airport outside Stockholm, Sweden, on June 10, 2025 Several rights groups including Amnesty International have accused Israel of genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza but Israel vehemently rejects the term. 'We must act, we must demand that our government acts, and we must act ourselves when our complicit governments do not step up,' Thunberg said. She rose to fame as a schoolgirl activist against climate change and seeks to avoid flying because of its environmental impact, going so far as to cross the Atlantic by sailboat twice. Despite her swift deportation, Thunberg was unrepentant. The activist vowed that they 'would not stop' trying to help and promised that 'this is not the end.' Thunberg told journalists shortly after landing in Paris: 'What is certain is that we will not stop. 'We are going to continue try to do everything we can because that is the promise that we have given to to Palestinians. 'We are going to try every single day in every way that we can and keep trying to demand an end to the atrocities.' Earlier in the day, Thunberg accused Israel of 'kidnapping' her in international waters, a claim she made previously in a dramatic pre-recorded SOS message released shortly after her detention. But a picture of her smiling as a soldier offered her sandwich after her boat was intercepted quickly went viral. Thunberg accused Israel of orchestrating a PR stunt following the action. Speaking on Tuesday, she doubled down: 'People were not being treated well. I was not able to to say goodbye to people and I don't know what's happening. And there were many, many issues'. Pressed for details on her treatment, she described the experience as 'very dehumanising,' though she insisted: 'But of course, I have to stress nothing compared to what Palestinians are going through. I would prefer not to go into detail'. She added: 'I do know that there were major issues with people actually getting to talk to lawyers. 'When you look at the state of the world, everything feels meaningless. But unless you try to do everything you can, we lose our hope.' The activist, who has long eschewed air travel for environment reasons, was photographed on board an aircraft en route to France earlier on Tuesday - a moment that Israel's Foreign Ministry was quick to publicise, posting the image on social media platform X. Prior to her deportation, Defence Minister Israel Katz said he'd instructed IDF officials to show the activists the full, unedited footage of the October 7 attacks as recorded by Hamas terrorist body cameras. 'It is appropriate that the anti-Semitic Greta and her fellow Hamas supporters see exactly who the Hamas terrorist organization they came to support and for whom they work is, what atrocities they committed against women, the elderly, and children, and against whom Israel is fighting to defend itself,' he said. Late on Monday night, he told reporters: 'Greta and her flotilla companions were taken into a room upon their arrival to the screening of the horror film of the October 7 massacre... when they saw what it was about, they refused to continue watching. 'The anti-Semitic flotilla members are turning a blind eye to the truth and have proven once again that they prefer the murderers to the murdered and continue to ignore the atrocities committed by Hamas against Jewish and Israeli women, adults, and children.' Katz and other Israeli officials have come under fire for branding Thunberg and her fellow activists 'anti-Semitic' for wanting to deliver aid to starving Gazans. But Israeli government spokesperson David Mencer said: 'This wasn't humanitarian aid. It's Instagram activism... 'Who's really feeding Gaza and who's really feeding their own ego? Greta was not bringing aid, she was bringing herself.' Meanwhile, the French government revealed that five of the six French citizens detained alongside Thunberg had refused to sign deportation orders, meaning they will now face judicial proceedings. US President Donald Trump did not miss the opportunity to wade in on the controversy. 'I think Israel has enough problems without kidnapping Greta Thunberg. She's a young, angry person... I think she has to go to an anger management class,' he said. Thunberg responded to his comments, saying: 'I think the world needs a lot of more young, angry women, to be honest, especially with everything going on right now'. After a brief stop in France, Thunberg landed back home at Stockholm's Arlanda airport just after 10:30pm Tuesday. She was greeted by around 30 cheering supporters waving Palestinian flags amid a large media presence at the airport. Of the 12 people on board the Madleen carrying food and supplies for Gaza, eight were taken into custody after they refused to leave Israel voluntarily. Four others, including Thunberg, were deported. All of them have been banned from Israel for 100 years, according to the rights group that legally represents some of them.

US criticises UK decision to sanction two Israeli ministers
US criticises UK decision to sanction two Israeli ministers

North Wales Chronicle

time2 hours ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

US criticises UK decision to sanction two Israeli ministers

Donald Trump's secretary of state Marco Rubio said that the travel ban and asset freeze imposed on Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich 'do not advance US-led efforts to achieve a ceasefire' and called for the measures to be reversed. The UK is taking the action alongside Australia, Canada, New Zealand and Norway. Mr Rubio said that the US 'stands shoulder-to-shoulder' with Israel. UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy said on Tuesday that the ministers had been 'inciting violence against Palestinian people for months and months and months, they have been encouraging egregious abuses of human rights'. In a post on X, Mr Rubio said that the 'United States condemns the sanctions imposed by the governments of United Kingdom, Canada, Norway, New Zealand, and Australia on two sitting members of the Israeli cabinet. These sanctions do not advance US-led efforts to achieve a ceasefire, bring all hostages home, and end the war.' The United States condemns the sanctions imposed by the governments of United Kingdom, Canada, Norway, New Zealand, and Australia on two sitting members of the Israeli cabinet. These sanctions do not advance U.S.-led efforts to achieve a ceasefire, bring all hostages home, and… — Secretary Marco Rubio (@SecRubio) June 10, 2025 He went on to say that America reminds 'our partners not to forget who the real enemy is'. 'The United States urges the reversal of the sanctions and stands shoulder-to-shoulder with Israel.' The sanctions against Israel's security and finance ministers were announced on Tuesday. Mr Smotrich and Mr Ben-Gvir both belong to right-wing parties which help to prop up Benjamin Netanyahu's fragile coalition government, and both have been criticised for their hardline stance on Gaza. Mr Smotrich has campaigned against allowing aid into Gaza, and also supported the expansion of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, which are considered illegal under international law. Meanwhile, Mr Ben-Gvir has called for Gaza's people to be resettled from the territory. In a joint statement with the foreign ministers of the other nations who also imposed sanctions, Mr Lammy said that the two sanctioned ministers had incited 'serious abuses of Palestinian human rights' and described their actions as 'not acceptable'. The statement added: 'We will strive to achieve an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, the immediate release of the remaining hostages by Hamas which can have no future role in the governance of Gaza, a surge in aid and a path to a two-state solution.' Downing Street said that the two men had been sanctioned in their 'personal capacities' and not 'their ministries and departments'. 'As the Israeli ambassador to the UK has said in recent interviews, their statements in their ministerial capacities do not even represent government policy,' a Number 10 spokesman said. The UK and other allies have upped pressure on Israel in recent weeks, amid aid shortages in Gaza and suggestions a large-scale offensive could be launched into the territory. It has been reported that only scarce amounts of aid is making it into the hands of people, and the slow flow of food and medicines has prompted warnings of famine and starvation.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store