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Flotilla Support For Gaza: Germany, Ireland, Scotland, America, Canada, Belgium, Norway, Sweden And Asian Muslims To Gaza
09 December 2010 By Stephen
Lendman
On May 28 (three days before
Israel's high seas massacre), Haaretz writers Jack
Khoury and Yuval Azoulay headlined, "Hamas: Flotilla
shows whole world opposes Gaza siege," saying:
Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh said
"if Israel behave(s) like pirates and attack(s) the
international Freedom Flotilla carrying 10,000 tons of
(humanitarian) aid for Gaza, then the Palestinians
will have won. The flotilla's message is clear and it
will reach the entire world."
Indeed so, and more are now
coming from over 10 countries, including America.
FreeGaza.org updates them. Angered by Israel's May 31
massacre, local initiatives plan their own missions.
Their aim: highlight Gaza's siege and shame Israel by
bringing aid until it ends.
Established in August 2008, the
Free Gaza human rights movement visited Gaza nine
times by sea "to break Israel's illegal stranglehold
on 1.5 million Palestinian civilians," suffocating
under siege.
It hasn't been clear sailing. In
2008, Free Gaza succeeded five times, but were
"violently intercepted on the(ir) past four voyages,"
including the lethal May 31 massacre, killing nine or
more activists and injuring many more. One of several
earlier articles explained, accessed through the
following link:
http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/05/brave-israeli-commandos-slaughter-aid.html
Free Gaza and its coalition
partners are the only organizations that "sent boats
directly to Gaza in defiance of Israel's criminal"
blockade. They "sail as an expression of citizen
nonviolent, direct action, confronting" Israeli
lawlessness, together with:
-- the European Campaign to End
the Siege on Gaza;
-- IHH - the Turkish Foundation
for Human Rights;
-- Freedoms and Humanitarian
Relief;
-- the International Committee to
End the Siege on Gaza;
-- Ship to Gaza Sweden; and
-- Ship to Gaza Greece.
Ahead, missions from growing
numbers of countries plan to deliver vitally needed
aid, and send a message that Israeli lawlessness won't
stand. Here they are, a humanitarian hall of fame.
Germany
Its initiative headlines a
fundraising appeal: "End the Blockade! A Ship with
Medical Aid for Gaza," saying:
"We refuse to stand by inactively
and watch as....1.5 million (people suffer)
strangulation and starvation," especially in Cast
Lead's aftermath. Past flotillas aren't enough. "We
want to join the appeal of the 'Free Gaza' campaign
and send a ship with medical necessities to Gaza from
a European port. This can only be achieved with a
great deal of public support...."
They need help to provide it,
saying:
"There can only be peace, when
human rights and international law (are) respected by
all sides. For this, the Gaza blockade must be lifted.
That would be an essential step toward more security
and freedom for everyone in the region."
Ireland
On August 31, the Belfast
Telegraph headlined, "Plans underway to send second
Irish ship to Gaza," saying:
Eight Irish activists were on
Freedom Flotilla I. Up to 50 more, comprised of seven
pro-Palestinian groups, plan another, and have
"launched a fundraising campaign to purchase an Irish
ship." Irish campaigner Dr. Fintan Lane said "funds
(are needed) to buy the boat, fuel, and to hire a
legal team in case of more kidnappings."
The web site FreeGazaIreland.com
highlights "Cementing Our Relationship with the People
of Gaza," calling on:
"families, schools, hospitals,
unions and community centres to buy bags of cement (to
help). They will be loaded onto a cargo ship as part
of an international flotilla...."
"Let's come together and support
the people of Palestine to rebuild their lives and end
the siege on Gaza and Israel's devastating
occupation."
Scotland
Scottish activists were aboard
Freedom Flotilla I. They're still trying to learn what
happened to the stolen cargo. They want it delivered.
They want their boats returned. They're pursuing a
legal complaint about Israel's attack. They want their
personal belongings back, especially videotape
evidence for a proper inquiry. They're not
intimidated. They're planning another flotilla.
FreeGaza-Scotland.org updates
information on their site. They're "hoping to (reach)
as many different Scottish groups and people as
(possible) to get a boat from here." They're working
with Tayside Justice For Palestine that sent medical
supplies with the Rachel Corrie in June. They request
funding help and contact with "any other groups" that
want to help.
America
USAtoGaza.org updates information
on their site. A November 1 press release headlined,
"As US Activists Prepare Boat to Gaza, Israel
Threatens to Use Snipers, Dogs," saying:
US peace activists are raising
$370,000 for a boat to sail in spring 2011 from a
Mediterranean port. Called "The Audacity of Hope," it
will join an international effort from "over a dozen
European, Asian and North American countries,"
including Canada. Israel, however, threatens deadly
force.
The mission's spokesperson, Jane
Hirschmann said:
"the Americans would not be
deterred by the Israeli threats. Of course, we take
(them) seriously. Nobody doubts the Israeli
government's willingness and readiness to use force
against unarmed civilians. But this is a nonviolent
mission on our part, challenging Israel's illegal
siege. Gaza remains essentially an open-air prison
under a US-backed Israeli blockade."
On board will be clergy, elderly
participants, and "Holocaust" survivors - Jews against
Israeli injustice.
A November 23 update expressed
"shock and outrage" over the May massacre, saying
"there had to be a US BOAT TO GAZA." In October, they
were invited to become part of Flotilla II to be
launched at end of March 2011.
It will be a larger effort,
involving more people worldwide, a combined one
traveling by sea as well as others "on land vigilant
as the boats sail." Besides delivering humanitarian
aid, they want Washington held accountable for
supporting Israeli crimes.
They also need funds and request
supporters contribute.
Canada
A collaborative initiative, two
Canadian efforts include FreeGazaCanada.org/FreeGazaQuebec.org
and CanadaBoatGaza.org/Bateau/Gaza.qc.ca.
They plan to sail in spring 2011
from an East Mediterranean port (likely Greece or
Turkey) with up to 40 participants. The team said (at
end of October) they were one-third toward their
$300,000 goal. "We are counting on your continued
support - only together can we achieve our ultimate
goal of justice and freedom for all Palestinians in
Gaza and elsewhere."
The Alternatives NGO is their
financial sponsor, an organization active in
supporting Middle East human rights and justice. What
they collect will go solely for the mission.
In early November, participant
Kevin Neish (aboard Flotilla I) began a cross-country
tour seeking support for the "Canadian Boat to Gaza,"
sailing with Flotilla II. Their members span the
nation from Halifax and Montreal to Vancouver.
Included are activists, doctors, authors, educators,
engineers, unionists, husbands and wives, Christians,
Jews and Muslims, committed for social justice.
They state:
"The Canadian Boat to Gaza is a
project launched by Canadian civil society activists
(wanting) Canadian (participation) in the
international effort to end the Israeli blockade of
Gaza."
They'll challenge Israel's
illegal siege, enlist broad support, and increase
awareness of Gazan suffering.
Dozens of organizations endorse
them, including:
-- the Arab Cultural Forum
-- the Palestinian NGOs' Network
(PNGO);
-- Amnesty International Windsor
-- the Alliance of Concerned
Jewish Canadians;
-- the Boycott Israeli Apartheid
Campaign (BIAC);
-- Canadians, Arabs and Jews for
a Just Peace (CAJJP);
-- CodePink, Canada; and
-- Not in Our Name, among
others.
Belgium
Belgium to Gaza (BelgiumGaza.org)
headlines "Set sail to a liberated Gaza, navigate for
justice," saying it's a "platform of Belgian
organizations and individuals" working to challenge
Israel's illegal siege. It uses Flotilla I's motto,
saying:
"We people of the world will do
what our governments refuse to do!"
It's also in fundraising mode to
raise $300,000, asking supporters to be as generous as
possible.
Norway
"Ship Two Gaza Norway (STGN) is a
politically and religiously independent organization
for individuals and organizations that work to ensure
that international law" applies to Gaza.
It sent other boats in August
2008 from Cyprus with 44 passengers from 17 countries.
It succeeded despite Israeli efforts to sabotage it.
No one was harmed. One participant on arrival, El-Farra
Musheir, a diaspora Palestinian, said:
"For the first time in my life, I
came to Gaza without being humiliated, without having
to ask Israel for permission. We did it. We (finally)
made it. Now others must join us and do (it), too."
Other missions followed, five in
all preceding Cast Lead. In December 2008, the Israeli
navy rammed the boat Dignity in international waters,
causing heavy damage, besides firing machine guns into
the water to intimidate passengers on board.
Mission leader, Huwaida Arraf,
co-founder of the International Solidarity Movement
(ISM), an activist pro-Palestinian group, later
explained her determination to help, saying:
"We cannot sit still and wait for
Israel to stop killing people. When the world's
countries and international institutions have the
responsibility to stop such crimes, (but choose) to be
impotent, (then) we, world citizens" must act. "Our
common humanity simply requires it of us."
They and others keep doing it
despite Israel responding harshly - interdicting,
harassing, arresting, imprisoning, killing nine or
Mavi Marmara activists, and threatening violence
against future missions.
Ship Two Gaza Norway will join
Flotilla II. Those wishing to participate should
contact them at passenger@shiptogaza.no.
Sweden
ShiptoGaza.se stands in
solidarity with Gazans. Once funds are raised, it will
"send a ship with necessities from Scandinavia via
ports in Europe and the Mediterranean to Gaza."
On November 7, spokespersons Dror
Feiler and Mehmet Kaplan, both aboard Flotilla I,
"will travel to Israel to submit a police report on
behalf of all eleven Swedish passengers." A lawsuit
was also filed against the IDF, state of Israel, Prime
Minister Netanyahu, and Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi,
alleging "armed robbery and/or larceny, kidnapping,
deprivation of freedom and assault."
Asian Muslims
to Gaza
On October 4, Haaretz ran an AP
story headlined, "Hundreds of activists from Muslim
countries planning new Gaza-bound flotilla," saying:
Around 500 activists from "dozens
of Muslim countries," including Pakistan, Iran, Syria
and Turkey "aim to break the blockage by December
27."
On December 2, they'll leave from
India by land, cross Pakistan, Iran, Turkey and Syria,
"then try to reach Gaza by sea." The Turkish
Foundation for Human Rights and Freedoms and
Humanitarian Aid (IHH), bogusly called an extremist
Islamic terrorist group, will sponsor the Turkish leg
of the trip. IHH provides humanitarian aid "to spread
justice and good. (It) fight(s) violation(s) of
anyone's basic liberties and human rights (and)
perpetuat(es) good anytime and anywhere."
A Final Comment
FreeGaza.org has global
volunteers. Besides the above countries, they're in
Argentina, Australia, Chile, Denmark, England, France,
India, Italy, Jordan, Lebanon, Malaysia, Poland,
Spain, the United Arab Emirates, and elsewhere.
More flotillas are coming until
Gaza is free, the siege ended, rebuilding can begin,
and what passes for normal life can resume.
Banned from Gaza since November
2006, Haaretz writer Gideon Levy asks "all Israelis to
be outraged - or at least understand what is being
perpetrated in their name, so they may never have the
right to claim: we did not know." That applies
everywhere, flotilla activists in the vanguard,
galvanizing mass awareness and outrage for justice.
A hopeful sign: On November 26,
the International Middle East Media Center reported
that (on 11/25) the 30-vehicle "Road to Hope" convoy
reached Gaza with aid and 101 activists, including
eight Flotilla I survivors..
Egypt tried to obstruct them,
then relented. Supplies included medical aid,
educational materials and equipment, blankets, toys,
and vehicles. Momentum keeps building for sustained
help until Gaza's siege is lifted, a hopeful sign
indeed.
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished
guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the
Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central
time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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