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Greta Thunberg arrives in France after deportation from Israel

The crew of the Madleen were taken from the boat when the Israeli military seized the vessel yesterday.

LAST UPDATE | 10 Jun

Associated Press / YouTube

ACTIVIST GRETA THUNBERG has arrived in France after being deported from Israel when she and other activists on a ship trying to bring aid to Gaza were detained.

The activist group departed Italy on 1 June aboard the Madleen carrying food and supplies for Gaza, whose entire population the UN has warned is at risk of famine.

Their aim was to break the ongoing siege of Gaza and deliver a symbolic amount of aid to the people on the ground. However, Israeli forces intercepted the boat in international waters yesterday and prevented the group from reaching the Palestinian territory. 

flotilla thiago Activist Thiago Ávila with the Madleen. Israeli DFA Israeli DFA

Overnight, the Israeli Foreign Ministry said the group were at Ben Gurion Airport being processed for deportation. 

Thunberg was put on a flight bound for France.

Speaking upon arrival at Paris’ Charles de Gaulle Airport, Thunberg called for the release of the other activists who were detained.

She described a “quite chaotic and uncertain” situation during the detention but said the conditions they faced “are absolutely nothing compared to what people are going through in Palestine and especially Gaza right now”.

Huwaida Arraf, a human rights lawyer and founder of the Freedom Flotilla Coalition, said earlier that it was her understanding that two other activists would be on a flight shortly after Thunberg but that eight more remained in Israeli detention.

Speaking to RTÉ’s Morning Ireland, Arraf said it’s “important to clarify that these 12 civilians were sailing lawfully in international waters”.

“They were headed towards Palestinian territorial waters, where Israel has no jurisdiction and is unlawfully maintaining a blockade,” said Arraf.

“Israel abducted these 12 and took them against their will to Israel, and now it is claiming that they unlawfully entered Israel.”

She said that while some agreed to deportation, others opted to come before an immigration judge.

However, Arraf said “There is no justice to be had in the Israeli legal system, so they will eventually be deported”.

She said other aid boats are planned until “this siege is broken”.

“One left from Tunisa yesterday, and in a few days, thousands of people from all over the world will be flying to Egypt and trying to march and break the land blockade at Rafah.”

Israel seized Madleen

Video released yesterday by the group showed the activists with their hands up as Israeli forces boarded the vessel, with one of them saying nobody was injured.

Israel’s actions have been condemned, with Turkey saying the interception was a “heinous attack” and Iran denouncing it as “a form of piracy” in international waters.

French President Emmanuel Macron requested that the six French nationals aboard the boat “be allowed to return to France as soon as possible”, a presidential official said.

boat The moment Israeli troops seized the Madleen. Israel DFA Israel DFA

Minister for Foreign Affairs, Simon Harris, yesterday released a statement, praising the crew of the Madleen for highlighting the “urgent and essential need to end the blockade on humanitarian aid” in Gaza.

He said, “What has happened is another effort by the Israeli authorities to stop the entry of aid”.

Simon Harris TD / X (Formerly Twitter)

In May, another Freedom Flotilla ship, the Conscience, was damaged in international waters off Malta as it headed to Gaza, with the activists saying they suspected 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, left 10 civilians dead.

On Sunday, Israel’s Defence Minister, Israel Katz, said the blockade, in place for years before the Israel-Hamas war, was needed to prevent Palestinian militants from importing weapons.

Journalists on board

The Madleen was intercepted about 185 kilometres (115 miles) west of the coast of Gaza, according to coordinates from the coalition.

Two of the crew are journalists, Omar Fayyad of Qatar-based Al Jazeera and Yanis Mhamdi who works for online publication Blast, according to media rights group Reporters Without Borders, which condemned their detention and called for their “immediate release”.

Al Jazeera “categorically denounces the Israeli incursion”, the network said in a statement, demanding the reporter’s release.

Adalah, an Israeli NGO offering legal support for the country’s Arab minority, said the activists on board the Madleen had requested its services, and that the group was likely to be taken to a detention centre before being deported.

Israel is facing mounting pressure to allow more aid into Gaza to alleviate widespread shortages of food and basic supplies.

In what organisers called a “symbolic act”, hundreds of people launched a land convoy on Monday from Tunisia with the aim of reaching Gaza.

‘Our children are dying’

Israel recently allowed some deliveries to resume after barring them for more than two months and began working with the newly formed, US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.

But humanitarian agencies have criticised 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 defence agency.

In Gaza City on Monday, displaced Palestinian Umm Mohammed Abu Namous told AFP that she hopes “that all nations stand with us and help us, and that we receive 10 boats instead of one”.

“We are innocent people,” she said. “Our children are dying of hunger… We do not want to lose more children because of hunger.”

The 2023 Hamas attack that triggered the war resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people on the Israeli side.

The health ministry in Gaza says at least 54,880 people, the majority civilians, have been killed in the territory since the start of the war. The UN 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.

Additional reporting from AFP

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