Israel got a
taste of the new people’s Egypt with the arrest of an Egyptian journalist on the
flotilla to Gaza and plans for the biggest aid convoy yet, reports Eric
Walberg
The ongoing Freedom Waves campaign to break the siege of
Gaza hit the world headlines last week with the attempt by the Canadian Tahrir
and the Irish Saoirse -- Arab and Irish for freedom -- to bring aid to Gazans
directly. This time the boats left from Turkey, not Greece, where last June
authorities refused to let the Freedom Flotilla depart. “Our efforts in Greece
only fuelled our determination to challenge the imprisonment of the people of
Gaza. We said we would continue to sail and so we are,” according to a Freedom
Waves press statement.
This time there were 27 activists, including
Americans, Canadians, Irish, Polish, Greek, Palestinian and -- for the first
time an Egyptian, Al-Masri Al-Youm English Managing Editor Lina Attalah. For 27
years, Israel has been violating the 1979 Peace Treaty with Egypt, which
guaranteed “full autonomy” for the Palestinians within five years. So it was
appropriate for an Egyptian to become the 27th member of the team of activists
trying to break the Gaza siege.
Tahrir passenger Kit Kittredge said, “In
our sails is the wind of worldwide public opinion which has turned against the
illegal blockade.” Retired US army colonel Ann Wright said, “We carry
inspiration from the Arab Spring and the worldwide Occupy movements. Where
governments fail, civil society must act. We will not stand by and watch $30
billion of our tax money committed to buying Israel weaponry used to carry out
this illegal occupation of Palestine.”
Attalah described how, as Israel
warships approached, activists and journalists started throwing equipment into
the sea, “fearing that the information stored on them could be used to implicate
other activists who were not on board”. When the Israel military asked their
destination, organiser Ehab Lotayef replied first, “The conscience of humanity”,
and as the Israelis sprayed the peaceful protesters with salt water, “The
betterment of mankind”. Attalah counted 15 ships, with “dozens of Israeli
soldiers pointed their machines guns at us”.
Their communications system
was jammed and they entered the Israel no-mans land. But not without an Israeli
practical joke. The Israelis “offered to send one person to inspect for weapons,
and if he found nothing, they would let us pass”.
But the ships were
suddenly ordered to proceed to Ashdod in Israel, and when the order was ignored,
the Israelis boarded the ships, brandishing guns, ready to shoot anyone
resisting, and using tear gas and tasers. The Tahrir and the Saoirse were forced
to crash into each other, crippling both ships, and their engine rooms flooded,
exposing them to the danger of sinking.
What equipment had not been
thrown overboard was stolen by the pirates. Israeli Mad Kayal said, “As a
Palestinian, I was not surprised at how the IDF treated us; however, for the
Canadians and other Westerners onboard, it was a complete shock.” President of
the European Parliament Jerzy Buzek, who in the past called Israel “an
indispensable partner for the EU”, refused to criticise his “partner” for the
arrest and imprisonment of Irish Euro MP Paul Murphy for three days.
In
contrast, Attalah was treated with kid gloves, and -- without any exchange of
Israeli spies -- was taken by an Egyptian embassy official to the border at
Taba. She was upbeat in her report, relating how they got much closer this time
-- 50 km as opposed to 100 km in the past, and how Jewish activists, preparing
for the expected Israeli attack, helped translate slogans “This is piracy” and
“This is kidnapping” into Hebrew to greet the Israelis.
Shamefully, US
State Department official Victoria Nuland warned activists, they “could face
civil and criminal penalties in their efforts to deliver resources to the Gaza
Strip,” and the US consul in Israel advised them to sign an Israeli deportation
agreement. The activists refused, as the statement said they entered Israel
illegally and would not attempt another effort to break the Gaza blockade,
thereby giving de facto credibility to the seige.
Absurdly, US House
Resolution 3131 introduced last month would require the State Department to
investigate “the sources of any logistical, technical, or financial support for
the Gaza flotilla ships” and produce “a report on whether any support
organisation that participated in the planning or execution of the recent Gaza
flotilla attempt should be designated as a foreign terrorist
organisation”.
The story did not end with the deportation of the plucky
activists. Israel cyberwarfare expertise is well known, but so is that of
computer hackers Anonymous. They decided to avenge the Freedom Wavers, warning
the Israeli military hours before they seized the ships: “If you continue
blocking humanitarian vessels to Gaza then you will leave us no choice but to
strike back. Again and again, until you stop.”
A few days later, over a
dozen Israeli government websites crashed, including Shin Bet, Mossad, the IDF,
the Health, Justice Housing, Science and Sports Ministries, the President’s
Residence, the Immigration Authority, the Israel Land Administration and the
Atomic Energy Commission. As Jewish philosopher Hillel the Elder said, “Do unto
others as you would have them do unto you.”
Freedom Waves will continue
to lap against Israeli gunships in their attempt to reach the shores of Gaza.
There are tentative plans for a “Sailing for Freedom” yacht race next summer
from Marseille France, a kind of Tour de Méditerranée, going to
Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt and on to Palestine. Turkey has committed itself to
protect future naval convoys breaking the siege.
Land convoys are also
being organised. The British group Long Live Palestine has called on people
around the world to take part in a convoy of medical aid to break Israel’s
blockade on Gaza, starting 27 December. Organisers are planning for Viva
Palestina 6 – Return Convoy to be the biggest convoy of aid yet, and hope to
involve Egyptians again and enter via the Rafah crossing.