Israel seizes aid boat headed for Gaza Strip, arrests 12 on board

Israeli Navy intercepts second aid ship in a week from flotilla aiming to break the devastating Gaza Strip blockade.

Israeli military naval vessels patrol off the southern Israeli port city of Ashdod
Israel prohibits ships from travelling more than six nautical miles from Gaza's coastline [Ariel Schalit/AP]

Israeli naval forces seized a Swedish-flagged ship carrying much-needed aid that was headed for the besieged Gaza Strip.

The Freedom for Gaza vessel, which had 12 people and medical equipment onboard, was intercepted late on Friday and taken to the Israeli port of Ashdod, the Israeli military said in a statement.

The ship was part of a four-vessel Freedom Flotilla Coalition that left from Denmark in May with the aim of breaking the crushing 12-year Gaza blockade imposed by Israel and neighbouring Egypt.

Its last reported position before losing contact with the flotilla was 40 nautical miles from Gaza’s coastline, the group said in a statement on Saturday.

“We demand that the Israeli occupation forces not interfere with our unarmed yacht as we continue our voyage to Gaza to deliver our gift of much-needed medical supplies,” Dror Feiler, a spokesman for the coalition, said.

Two million people living in Gaza lack access electricity, food, healthcare and other basic services, according to the UN, with conditions in the enclave set to become “unliveable” by 2020.

Repeated interceptions

The Israeli army said in a statement the vessel was monitored and intercepted in accordance with international law. Those on board were held for “further inquiry”.

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It was the second flotilla vessel held by Israeli authorities in a week, after naval forces seized a Norwegian-flagged boat carrying at least 23 people on Sunday.

The interceptions follow a number of failed attempts by activists to reach Gaza’s coastline in recent years.

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In 2015, a flotilla of four boats bound for Gaza was forcibly redirected to Ashdod.

In 2010, an attempt to reach the enclave by the Turkish Mavi Marmara flotilla proved fatal when Israeli commandos stormed the ship, killing nine Turkish nationals.

In May,  a flotilla carrying at least 25 patients, students and activists broke Israel’s imposed boundary off the coast of the Gaza Strip for the first time in more than a decade.

Israel prohibits ships from travelling more than six nautical miles from Gaza’s coastline.

The vessel, however, travelled nine nautical miles offshore before four Israeli warships flanked it and diverted it to Ashdod.

Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies

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