Abject Inhumanity – Israel’s Imprisonment of Gaza

You can know about Israel’s abject inhumanity, you can see it at first hand, read about it, write about it every day, but every so often it slaps you right in the face. The sheer fucking inhumanity and barbarism of people deciding that cornflakes and children’s books are not to be allowed into Gaza…it’s mindblowing. The entire situation is so beyond wrong that sometimes it’s hard to comprehend.

That’s it, I have no more words for this tonight.

In response to watching this on TG4

Fíorscéal: Luxuries/Galántais Gaza (OS)
Fíorscéal: Luxuries/Galántais Gaza (OS)
23:00
The Israeli blockade on Gaza is tightly monitored: essential necessities allowed, luxuries denied. At their weekly meeting at the Defense Ministry the Israeli bureaucrats move on to the next item on their agenda: hair conditioner. Palestinians may have a right to clean hair, but they don’t have a right to smooth and silky hair. And it was pretty devious of the Palestinians to purchase a 2-in-1 shampoo-conditioner blend. Letting that into Gaza is a slippery slope. Permission denied! (Repeat)

Gaza – Heart Hurts

I’m sitting on my sofa on a quiet Friday evening; safe, protected, free and I’m reading the internet and seeing terrible brutality being inflicted on the people of Gaza by Israel, again.

This afternoon I posted this: “Two people murdered in Gaza by Israeli war criminals today, Zuhair Qaisi and Mahmoud Hanini are their names. Mahmoud Hanini was released as part of the prisoner agreement and, although from Nablus, was exiled to Gaza. Endless slaughter.”  Now that number has risen to seven killed, murdered – apparently a woman has lost her husband and her father in two separate attacks.  Friends, Palestinian and Irish, are posting and tweeting from Gaza about areas being rocked by explosions, about aerial bombardment, tank shelling and shelling from the sea – they are under attack. I’m reading all of this on the internet because it won’t be in the mainstream media, they don’t report dead Palestinians unless the numbers are too high for them to ignore. They didn’t report the deaths of two Palestinian children from unexploded ordinance near Hebron this week,  nor the 17 year old boy killed yesterday. Just as they don’t report on Hana’ al Shalabi on hunger strike for 22 days to protest being held without charge in Israeli “administrative detention”, just as they ignored Khader Adnan until he was into his 65th day of hunger strike. They ignore the thousands of Palestinians who courageously protest against the apartheid wall every week, assaulted by tear gas and bullets, arrested. They ignore the millions who resist in every breath, simply by existing and remaining.

As Gaza is under assault again, its hospitals are running low on medicine, there are long and crippling power cuts and  people still remain imprisoned, trapped by this brutal siege imposed by a rotten, disgusting, apartheid state.  Israel terrorises the people of Gaza and locks up people who try to break the siege – meantime Netanyahu remains at large, dines at the top political tables and Obama cravenly tells AIPAC  he’s “got Israel’s back.”

I can’t imagine what it must be like to live with your freedom at the whim of a state who wants you to cease to exist, where even your electricity is rationed, your water polluted, your friends and family constantly under threat. I can’t imagine what it must be like to be under attack from war planes, tanks, navy gunships – from the air, sea and land. I can’t imagine how traumatised people must be by all this violence directed at them, especially after the mass slaughter of 2008/09. I can’t imagine, but I want to – I want to do something and all I can do is type this and send my love and solidarity to friends and everyone in Gaza.

This has to stop, it is an affront to humanity.

Update: It seems every half hour the death toll rises. I was just adding this: ‘Palestinian Legislative Council in Gaza attacked by Israeli war criminals – three dead. Number of those murdered today is ten now, many more injure” when I saw on twitter that two more people have been killed.

 

Press Release:Gaza Under Attack  “Besieged Gaza, Occupied Palestine–We condemn in the strongest possible terms the latest Israeli war crimes committed against our people in the Gaza Strip. We call on the international community and the Arab and Islamic worlds, to take up their responsibility to protect the Palestinian people from this heinous aggression and immediately terminate the continuing Israeli policy of collective punishment.”

The Irish Minister for Foreign Affairs and Israel

On 24th November 2011, not long after 14 Irish citizens were expelled from Israel having been kidnapped in international waters by the Israeli navy and imprisoned for a week, the Irish Minister for Foreign Affairs and Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore accepted an invitation to the Israeli Film Days Festival at Filmbase in Dublin.  (Film fight: how an Israeli festival in Dublin is causing controversy) This evcnt was sponsored by the Israeli Embassy and protestors outside were treated very roughly by Gardaí.

Prior to the event I emailed Eamonn Gilmore’s office, see below, asking him not to attend this event. Many other friends and opponents of apartheid did the same. As a passenger on the MV Saoirse, I witnessed the absolute lack of respect that the Irish Ambassador and Deputy Head of Mission were treated with by the Israelis, particularly on the last day of our illegal detention when we were twice prevented from flying home. During our imprisonment it was abundantly clear that Mr. Gilmore’s concern for us was minimal as he didn’t immediately call for our  release, however I expected that he might have had some concern for how the embassy officials were treated.  Freedom Waves to Gaza – Tales of a kidnapping from the MV Saoirse  

The response I got from the minister’s office is the exact stock response that everyone who wrote to him received and neither addresses the specific issues I  raised nor makes any reference to our kidnapping at sea,  I find this insulting. The email also cites the Tánaiste’s respect for the right of Irish citizens to protest the festival, something belied by the heavy handed treatment of those doing so by the Gardaí.  Gardai break up peaceful protest outside Israeli Embassy sponsored film festival

Palestinian civil society has called for a cultural and academic boycott of Israel and events sponsored by the state very definitely fall within this remit. As governments fail to support the Palestinian people, fail to ensure international law is upheld, it is up to civil society to act.

Dear Tánaiste,

I’m writing to ask you to reconsider your attendance at the “Israeli Film Days” event hosted by the Israeli Embassy at filmbase tomorrow evening. Given this statement made in numerous email replies during the time of incarceration of the MV Saoirse crew, myself among them: “The Tánaiste has consistently stated his condemnation of and opposition to the overall blockade on Gaza, as it is implemented in practice by Israel.”; it is astonishing that you would attend an event such as this, hosted by the very state implementing this illegal, immoral siege.

The Israeli state is practising apartheid against its Palestinian citizens;  occupation and imprisonment of the West Bank and Gaza – no government should be enabling any normalisation events hosted by such a state.

Having witnessed first hand the contempt with which the excellent Irish Embassy officials Breifni O’Reilly and Conor Long, as well as ourselves as Irish citizens, were treated with by the Israeli officials while in prison and the day we were due to fly home, I find your attendance at this event unbelievable.

Please reconsider attending, please stand with the oppressed, not with the oppressors.

Best regards,


13th December 2011

Dear Ms. Lawlor,

The Tánaiste and Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade, Eamon Gilmore T.D, has asked me to thank you for your correspondence concerning his attendance at the Israeli film festival held in Dublin in November.

The Government does not support academic, cultural or other boycotts against Israel. This has been the position of every Irish Government. Attempts to impose a cultural boycott only play into the hands of those in Israel who claim that Ireland’s consistent criticisms of Israeli policies are based on antipathy rather than on our genuine and valid concerns about the human rights abuses arising from the continued occupation of the Palestinian territories. The Tánaiste is of the view that these actions only undermine Ireland’s voice on these critical issues in the quarters where it most needs to be heard.

The Tánaiste fully respects the rights of those who wished to protest about the festival, but believed strongly that efforts to prevent the festival being held at all amounted to an attack on free speech in Ireland, which he did not hesitate to oppose. He attended the opening of the festival to make this clear. As he stated in his remarks on the occasion, filmmakers in Israel, as elsewhere, are often to the fore in challenging political or social orthodoxies. Indeed, no suggestion appears to have been made that these films were themselves defending, or even concerned with, the Israeli policies of which the Tánaiste and others have rightly been critical. The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade likewise sponsors the showing of Irish films at festivals around the world, to make more widely known the diversity of voices in contemporary Ireland. We would likewise expect the authorities in other countries to protect our right to do so.

Clearly, the Tánaiste’s attendance can not in any way be construed as supporting or condoning specific Israeli policies, but as supporting the principle of free speech and the right of these voices – in this case from Israel – to be heard. The remarks of Israeli Ambassador Modai at the opening made clear that he too did not put any wider construction on the Tánaiste’s presence.

Yours sincerely,

_______________

On January 18th 2012 Israeli MKs Reuven Rivlin (speaker of the Israeli parliament and rightwing Likud member) and MK Yitzhak Herzog (Labour) and their entourage had a private meeting in Leinster House with the Minister for Foreign Affairs Eamon Gilmore.  Knesset speaker commences official visit to Ireland

MK Rivlin, contrary to international law, has called Jerusalem the capital of Israel and has attended a JNF tree planting ceremony – the same JNF that has been involved in ethnic cleansing of Palestinians from their land. Herzog is a supporter of illegal settlements on Palestinian land. Just what is it about Israeli officials and official events that Minister Gilmore finds so appealing,  more than international law or conscience?

Freedom Waves Flotilla to Gaza – ‘Court appearance’ Givon prison

This is a translation from Hebrew of my ‘court appearance’ in Givon prison. There’s quite a bit omitted, but the judge did say it would end up on the internet – it’s the only truth he told. Original document is below.

Court of Custody Control of Unlawful “Stayers” [illegal aliens.]

Protocol of day 8 November 2011

Custody facility- Giv’on Section -6

Name of detainee – Zoe F. Lawler

 Detainee No:  122858

Prisoner No: 1413821

Date entry Israel 4 November 2011

Date Custody order according to Entry Into Israel Law 5 November 2011

Passport: Yes

Visa; None

Citizenship:  Ireland

Detained for: Unlawful stay

Present: The Detainee

The [person] held in custody in her own words

I knew when I boarded the vessel that it is heading for Gaza. The intention was to break through the blockade and demonstrate solidarity with the people in Gaza.

It is my argument that the blockade is illegal [and therefore] I argue that I was kidnapped in the high sea.

I received no copy of the deportation order. I understand that I am being deported to Ireland and I consent.

In conversation with a representative of the embassy I was told that action is taken to organize a flight.

The legal proceedings were conducted in English, a language that the detainee commands to a sufficient degree.

Decision

The detainee was on board the vessel which was seized by the Israeli Navy opposite the Gaza shores. This, after it [the vessel] had violated or had intended to violate the naval blockade that Israel had imposed, by law, on the Gaza strip as a result of [Gaza] being engaged in an armed conflict with Israel and is being governed by a terror organization- Hamas.

The vessel, it’s crew and all the passengers were brought to the port of Ashdod where they were handed over to personnel of the Immigration Authority.  The Border Control officer in charge gave the detainee a hearing [after which] he issued her with a Custody [detention] Order and a Restraining Order.  [That], in keeping with the Entry Into Israel Law 1952.

Having studied the protocol of the SHABACH* [Unlawful stayer],the report of the operation, heard the detainee and examined the causes for release stipulated in clause 113 of the Entry to Israel Law 1952, I hereby determine that: I am not persuaded that the unlawful stay of the detainee is based on an error or on a bona fide mishap. The detainee’s stay in Israel today is unlawful and it is irrelevant that in fact she was brought to Israel against her will because of the violation of the Gaza blockade. Whereas she was brought to Israel and it was found that she is not entitled to stay [in the country] her sentence is removal [excusion?].**

I was not persuaded that the Detainee’s unlawful stay is founded on an error or on a bona fide mishap. The detainee boarded the seized vessel knowing and intending to attempt a breakthrough the naval blockade imposed on Gaza by Israel.

I was not persuaded that there are medical reasons justifying the release of the detainee. I was not persuaded that there are special humanitarian reasons justifying the release of the detainee.

I endorse the Custody Order without modification.

El’ad El’azar

Judge

Court of Detention Control

This decision may be appealed against [challenged] before the District Court sitting as a Court for Administrative matters

NB:

* SHABACH a term devised to describe Palestinian workers without an Israeli permit to work in Israel . Later expanded to include all persons denied leave to stay.
** The Hebrew term צו הרחקה is Restraining Order and הרחקה on its own means Exclusion or Removal. However, in context, it could well mean: Deportation Order.
Court Statement in Hebrew

Freedom Waves to Gaza – MV Saoirse Press

Some press from the follow up to MV Saoirse participation in the Freedom Waves Flotilla to Gaza.

Trevor Hogan and Mags O’Brien on TV3

Zoe Lawlor

Paul Murphy on Israel’s Lies

Ross man home after week in Israeli prison

Southside politician tells of ship terror

Trevor Hogan on the Marian Finucane show    Sunday

Trevor Hogan’s mission to Gaza

Hero Hogan puts himself on the line

Press Release: MEP returns home from delegation to Gaza

Freedom Waves to Gaza – Tales of a kidnapping from the MV Saoirse

Freedom waves, freedom rides, freedom marches…. it won’t stop until Palestine is free.

By Zoe Lawlor

(For Freedom Flotilla June see: Freedom Flotilla 2 – Stay Human – Thoughts from the Irish Ship)

On Wednesday 2nd November 2011 the MV Saoirse and the Tahrir sailed from Turkey to Gaza as part of Freedom Waves to Gaza – the international effort to break the illegal, immoral siege of Gaza and show solidarity with the people there. Although the Tahrir was carrying medical supplies and the Saoirse sports equipment, the aim of the mission was to break the political siege imposed by Israel on the people of Gaza, not as an aid mission.

These are my personal thoughts and recollections and really represent a means for me to put the events into some sort of chronology – it’s less an analysis and more a recounting of events. I would like to preface this by first stressing that the experience of the Saoirse and Tahrir people in Israeli captivity is in no way comparable to what the Palestinian people face daily from the apartheid state. Our brief time in captivity provided a minute snapshot of what Palestinian prisoners experience and I am in no way equating what happened to us with what happens to the Palestinians. The prisoners held in administrative detention were on my mind a lot when we were in prison as the thought of not knowing how long you are to be detained is truly frightening and is the reality for so many Palestinians. We also had the security of knowing that there were family members, friends and loved ones, solidarity initiatives, embassy and other political figures advocating for us and pressuring for our release – our European person’s privilege highlighted in stark contrast to the extremely limited rights of the Palestinian people.

We are not the story – the story is Palestine, the story is Gaza, the story is the Freedom Waves, the story is freedom.

I want to pay tribute to my shipmates, great and brilliant people that they are: Mags O’Brien, Fintan Lane, Hugh Lewis, Trevor Hogan, Chris Andrews, John Hearne, Pat Fitzgerald, John Mallon, Phil McCullough, Billy Smith, Paul Murphy, Felim Egan, Ger Barron and our Captain Zach. We also missed our shipmates from the summer: Gerry MacLochlainn, Charlie McMenamin, Rik Walton, Hussein Hammed and Jim Roche. The shore team were amazing too especially Claudia Saba, Laurence Davis, Ronan O’Dowd, Kev Squires, Raymond Deane, Greg Manahan and  Sinéad MacLochlainn.

Family, friends and loved ones went through so much and were strong voices for us throughout – I know my brother Gay burned the ear off DFA officials and media outlets, kept my mum and friends informed and was just brilliant.

Other friends gave amazing support, some of it very practical, you know who you are- many thanks a cháirde.

Also, the whole initiative would not have been possible without the generosity of the Irish people and other friends from far and wide who ran, sang, quizzed and found endless ways to raise funds for the MV Saoirse. Brilliant, all of you.

Sailing

From Wednesday we sailed for two days, extremely happy that despite sabotage and international governmental complicity in Israel’s crimes against the Palestinian people in June, we were at last on our way to Gaza. The significance of sailing and demonstrating to the people there that they are not isolated, that there are hundreds of thousands of people represented on these ships who stand with them and wish for their freedom was huge to us, we hadn’t given up, we were sailing – on course for Gaza.

The trip was fun, funny and hopeful, interspersed with some shipmates suffering badly from seasickness and very interesting times in the kitchen for the galley slaves, cooking while being fired from side to side is challenging! Sailing alongside the Tahrir was exhilarating and getting close and talking to our comrades across the waves was very emotional. Seeing the ships heading to Gaza, flying the Palestinian flag was just beautiful, I can only imagine how amazing the larger flotillas must have been.

On the Thursday evening after dinner we had a refresher meeting about what to do in the event of an Israeli intervention. Shortly after that a ship was spotted on our radar, there were spotter planes in the sky and everyone got ready for an Israeli intervention that evening. When the phone call hadn’t come by the small hours, most of us relaxed and thought we would get through the night safely.

Kidnapped

When the sun came up on Friday morning and we were still sailing unimpeded, hopes began to rise that we would get to Gaza. Looking at the Irish flag and the Palestinian flag fluttering on the Saoirse with Gaza in the not too far distance, it all seemed possible. Unfortunately and criminally it was not to be as the Israeli government sent an astonishing amount of force to stop twenty-seven people, armed solely with humanity and solidarity, from reaching Gaza. We were only forty nautical miles away when we were attacked, tantalisingly close. Our ships were surrounded by warships, zodiacs and gunboats, all populated by heavily armed, masked commandos. Our ships were corralled at sea and forced to collide causing much damage to the Saoirse which was taking on water – all of us put on our life jackets. Then the pirates water cannoned the ships, causing massive electrical damage, almost causing the bridge to go on fire and forcing our coordinator Fintan Lane down the stairs into the front saloon where water was pouring through the closed windows, soaking absolutely everything inside. The Saoirse was then violently boarded with the windows smashed and armed to the teeth commandos  boarding and threatening all the people on both ships. The crew on the Tahrir were also assaulted. In the front saloon of the MV Saoirse, Mags O’Brien and myself were held separately from our male colleagues and sat in the dark the entire trip to Ashdod as the lights had been blown by the water cannons – we were accompanied by at least four commandos for the journey, there were many more with the men. The efforts of our crew, especially Pat Fitzgerald the ship’s engineer, to keep us safe and also informed as to everyone’s welfare were incredible.

The commandos attempted to steal the Irish flag that they had removed from the Saoirse but were prevented from doing so. They also tried to put an Israeli flag on the Saoirse’s flagpole but we stopped that and ensured that our ship was not brought into Ashdod flying the apartheid flag. The commandos tried to sing military songs while saluting to each other in the front saloon but were ‘interrupted’ by our visits to the loo- we weren’t listening to that shit. From these actions the efforts to humiliate us are clear to see but thankfully were thwarted, equally obvious were pathetic efforts to capture propaganda footage to be used to paint the interception as not violent – offering us water and trying to film it (we refused), asking us if we were ok and telling us not to worry while pointing guns at our heads.

On shore captivity

 Once in Ashdod the groups in both saloons unanimously demanded to see the Irish ambassador and refused to leave the ship. The presence of Paul Murphy, Socialist Party MEP, no doubt lent weight to our demands a,s even for the Israeli government, there are limits and they most certainly include the European Parliament. There was a very large group of people in the port waiting to see us dragged from our ship, most of them with film cameras at the ready. (The level of voyeurism that accompanied all of the Israeli encounters was amazing, from multiple, unnecessary searches to constant filming)

Conor Long the Irish Deputy Head of Mission came to speak to us and a representative of the Israeli Department of Foreign Affairs was the liaison. We left the Saoirse under protest, stating we had been kidnapped and brought to Israel illegally and refusing to accept any status of illegal entry to the state. We were guaranteed phone calls, no strip searches and we refused to accept any physical assistance from the ship – no propaganda opportunities. In Ashdod the Israeli searching machine kicked into action with a vengeance and all of us were taken to temporary cubicles for a ridiculously thorough search of our belongings and the theft of all of our electronic equipment from phones to cameras, satellite phones and also personal items such as notebooks, work swipe cards, money etc.

Having been body searched twice and stripped down to my underwear the second time, I was taken to a prison van where one of my friends was handcuffed and shackled and one handcuffed (John Mallon and Phil McCullough), at the van a security person attempted to search me again, having just brought me from a search, I objected.

‘Court’

From there we were brought to Ofer military prison where we were ‘processed’, fingerprinted, photographed, and asked to sign deportation papers stating we had entered Israel illegally. Some of us were given copies of the papers for this procedure but most were not, the explanation of the process was negligible. Everyone also had an interview with Israeli intelligence who asked us if we were aware of the ‘military’ blockade of Gaza– needless to say we all explained that we were well aware of the illegal and immoral blockade of Gaza.

Prison

The next stop on this endless day in Israeli captivity was Givon prison in Ramle and the women went there separate from the men, our group now reduced to five: Mags O’Brien and me from the MV Saoirse and Jihan Hafiz, Kit Kittredge and Karen de Vito from the Tahrir. On arriving in Givon prison we were again searched thoroughly despite having just arrived from a lengthy search process, this time it was filmed and carried out before a large audience, some of our friends had their underwear sniffed. At 4 am I was locked into my cell and about half an hour later my friend and cellmate, Mags, was put in with me. Throughout this process we repeatedly asked for a phone call which we were denied.

During our incarceration in Givon we were denied a phone call and kept incommunicado until Sunday, we were also without books, pens or paper until then. In the women’s wing, as our numbers were smaller than in the men’s, we didn’t have a lot of free association with each other and spent 21 hours and 19 hours locked in on the first two days respectively. We tried to assert our rights as political prisoners and got some concessions but we were less successful than our male colleagues who were very organised. The prison guards were obnoxious, abusive and delighted in asserting whatever power they could over us. They would often refuse to tell us the time, repeatedly lying about it, wouldn’t turn our lights off at night, wouldn’t release us from the cells when it was our ‘out’ time. There were constant attempts to get us to sign the papers stating we had entered Israel illegally, to get us to buy our own tickets home, to threaten us with indefinite detention and there were constant lies – everything we were told was a lie. The guards dehumanised us in their own eyes as best they could, one of them screaming at Karen, Jihan and Kit that we were not human, not Israeli and had no rights. This was a constant among the security personnel we encountered, they hate supporters of Palestine, just less than they hate the Palestinian people.

Guards would burst into the cells in the morning, about 6 am, demanding we stand to be counted- there were usually two women and two men. We explained that if they couldn’t count two people locked in a cell while they were lying down, then that was their problem. There was a stream of disinformation from the prison people all the time, from lying about the time, to what the others were doing, to the timing of our release. We staged a protest in the corridor and refused to re-enter our cells unless we were guaranteed more time outside and free association with just the five of us. The prison commander came and the ‘rules’ were relaxed somewhat and we had more time in the air and the dreaded corridor – all better than the cells. Small victories, they seemed bloody huge at the time…

On a personal level,  being with our sisters from the Tahrir and with Mags was a great experience and we got to know each other well, shared stories and laughs and planned more flotillas and BDS actions! Every time we got to meet with our friends in the male wing was a huge bonus and seeing them and their strength kept us going. From Monday, when our US and Canadian colleagues left, it was just Mags and me on our wing and while we felt more vulnerable and isolated, we kept each other going and never had a cross word, it was great solidarity and a little sanity, more insanity!

‘Court’ Part 2

A judge visited the prison and left shaking having been through individual meetings with each of the men. When we met him the following day, he seemed resigned to his fate! He admitted to me that we hadn’t been treated in accordance with Israeli law, that we hadn’t received our full rights, hadn’t been given a copy of our deportation orders, that we should have been given both phone calls and access to phone cards. When pressed as to where the decision for this treatment came from, the judge first tried to blame the prison governor and then the Ministry of the Interior or the Department of Foreign Affairs – he conceded that “some procedures were not followed” but insisted that “technically” it was all the same thing – I insisted that “actually” it wasn’t and also queried the situation regarding the location and legitimacy of many of the ‘legal processes’ that took place in the corridors of the prison. The judge was also unable to explain why he didn’t recognise international law.

The Ben Gurion Vortex

On Wednesday 9th November we were called to leave Givon prison and seven of us were put on a bus to a detention centre inside Ben Gurion airport complex, via a trip to a high security check in the airport where one of our friends was handcuffed for sitting on the same side of the room as us. I was elated to be leaving the prison, delighted to be reunited with some of my shipmates and looking forward to meeting the other seven later that night. The detention centre was worse than the prison with the staff there displaying even more sadistic tendencies than those in Givon had. We were again separated by gender and put into a cell with six other women and no water. When I banged on the door to ask for water and to get some air, one of the guards came to the window, shouting and banging his head off it – he perfectly set the tone for the remainder of our captivity – rotten and aggressive.

On Thursday morning Mags and I were brought to the airport to allegedly board a flight home, we were brought to the main terminal where I was taken for another search despite having been in Israeli captivity since the previous Friday and having to sleep in my clothes as my belongings were now ‘secure’. We then entered a twilight zone that was to last the whole day, driving randomly around the airport with our guards either not knowing, or pretending not to know, where to bring us. We were eventually brought to our plane but not allowed to board and were brought back to the detention centre while being told to stop protesting or we would stay in Israel “forever”. Our five friends were at the detention centre as were the Irish Ambassador and Deputy Head of Mission, all of whom were infuriated by the fact that we were not on a flight home. The guys were not even released from their cells or brought to the airport so there was clearly no intention to get us on that flight. At this point we were able to make only our second call home in seven days to let our loved ones know that we would not be home as expected. With much wrangling and many phone calls by the ambassador and deputy, the seven of us were organised for a flight to Frankfurt that afternoon, we were vouched for by the Irish ambassador, and the German and Polish embassies contacted the airline too. We were getting anxious about departure time but were assured that there would be time as there would be no further searches, then we were loaded into segregated prison vans and taken to the plane. There the main guard went on board with all of our documents and then we were driven away from the plane and up to the main terminal where Fintan Lane and I were taken off for another search. I was furious at this point and knew we would never get on that flight, especially as the search was so slow and there was no van waiting when we came out after it. When we were eventually put in another van, we were driven to near where the planes were and then turned around and driven away, we repeatedly asked where we were being taken to but they ignored us, saying only there was a passport problem. This was the time I was most worried as we were separated from the rest of the group and didn’t know where we were going. After some aimless driving around, we were brought again to the detention centre where the furious DFA people met us and attempted to get us on another flight. The guards in the detention centre refused to let them see our passports and treated the Irish officials with contempt, as they had with the Irish government with all the messing around regarding flights. Flights to Istanbul were organised finally and then we were told to run, get our bags and go to the airport again. When we got to the van to go to the airport one minute later we were told it was too late and we had needed to check in three hours previously – comical, groundhog day, malicious mind games stuff. Some sense prevailed in the centre and a call was made and we were brought to the airport in the same van as Hassan Ghani, one of our colleagues from the Tahrir. On our way out, we met the second seven of our friends – heading in to spend a night in that horrible place. Only when the flight took off did I believe I was out of Israel, which I never wanted to visit in the first place.

Twelve hours in Istanbul airport and then HOME.

Some final observations:

For me the most important aspect of this leg of the Irish Ship to Gaza, Freedom Flotilla 2 campaign was that we did sail and we refused to accept the crimes being perpetrated against the people of Gaza by Israel and that another year didn’t pass without people at least getting on the water. We didn’t reach the shores of Gaza but we got close and demonstrated our love and solidarity for the Palestinian people, also our immense respect and admiration for their incredible sumoud.

Civil society is key to ending Israeli apartheid – Palestinian civil society leads and the international solidarity movements follow. The BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) campaign is vital to delegitimising the Israeli regime’s crimes against the Palestinian people. All efforts to end complicity with this regime have to be supported – boycott all Israeli goods, ensure no artist performs there without huge protest, work to end EU funding for collaboration with Israeli research projects, highlight the importance of Israeli blood diamonds to the economy and to funding war crimes against the Palestinian people.

The security apparatus employed by the Israeli state is staggering, the sheer numbers of people employed to police and enforce apartheid are huge. The amount of searches reflects the matrix of control they try to impose and for every searcher, there are at least five observers.

While Irish embassy staff in Israel did a lot to help us, especially on the Thursday when they went all out to assist us to get home, it is profoundly depressing and disenfranchising for our government not to have called for our immediate release. I have no doubt that had another state kidnapped fourteen Irish citizens in international waters, illegally brought them to that state and then imprisoned them, the Táiniste would have called for their release – in our case he didn’t.

The clichés are sometimes true, small numbers of people can take on oppression – the reaction where the Israeli navy had to send gunboats, warships, massive weaponry to stop twenty-seven people is testament to that. Israeli pirates won’t stop us, their jails won’t break us. We will sail again to Gaza.

The inspiring resilience and resistance that the Palestinian people have displayed since the Nakba of 1948 is what moves people all over the world to act and to support them in their hundreds of thousands. No militarised, aggressive, apartheid state can stop the Freedom Waves and waves of love for Palestine. We’ll keep sailing, marching, freedom fighting until Palestine is free- they can do it, why can’t we? I’ve been trying to get to Gaza for years, I’ll get there yet.

Freedom waves, freedom rides, freedom marches…. it won’t stop until Palestine is free.

Thanks for reading and Stay Human.

http://www.tv3.ie/videos.php?video=42312&locID=1.65.370&page=1

Press Cuttings:

Ross man home after week in Israeli prisonUL lecturer back home following deportation

UL lecturer back home following deportation

Southside politician tells of ship terror

Israeli officials lied to Gaza ship crew: MEP

More Press here: Freedom Waves to Gaza – MV Saoirse Press

Freedom Flotilla 2 – Stay Human – Thoughts from the Irish Ship

As a crew member on the MV Saoirse, the Irish ship to Gaza, I wrote this to try to sum up some of my thoughts.

Thanks for all the great support and kind wishes to all friends and comrades for the past while. The shore team for the Irish Ship to Gaza has done amazing work as have all friends and family putting pressure on politicians, writing to newspapers etc. Gaza has been in the news a lot and hopefully awareness of the illegality and total immorality of the siege will spread until there is justice for Palestine.

It seems like much longer than two weeks ago that I headed off to join my shipmates in Turkey to set sail for Gaza on the MV Saoirse as part of Freedom Flotilla 2 – Stay Human. After almost a year of fundraising and organising, the MV Saoirse, funded out of the pockets and good hearts of thousands of people, was to leave for Gaza with the lucky 20 of us on it, representing all of those people and their efforts.

Being with my brilliant shipmates for the last two weeks has been a great experience and I am better for knowing them. When the cause is just, the people involved are usually good ones, I’m happy to know these ones and have made friends for life.

The Irish ship to Gaza was carrying passengers and our aim was to break the siege of Gaza. The Flotilla is about solidarity and challenging the illegal blockade, not about aid. The people of Gaza are proud people with long years of resistance behind them, they are not to be passive recipients of aid, so offers to transport aid carried by some of the ships through Israel miss the point completely.

When we discovered that our ship had been damaged, everyone was devastated and when we saw how clear the sabotage was, we were angry that Israel would do that to our ship and try to undermine this civil society initiative. That Israel would put the lives of Irish citizens in such danger surprises me not one bit, that the Irish government would again be so supine in the face of such breaches of international law is also unsurprising. As Israeli impunity continues unchallenged at a political level, the behaviour of the state worsens in tandem. If you can bomb a captive population for 22 days with no consequences, murder nine activists on the last Flotilla and continue to implement apartheid and ethnic cleansing policies, what’s a little sabotage?

Six of the MV Saoirse passengers were kindly taken in by the Dutch-Italian Ship, the Stefano Chiarini and headed to Corfu after an emotional goodbye with our comrades who headed home to fly the flag. Unfortunately, there we discovered that the Greek government was to abet Israel in stopping the Flotilla and after waiting as long as we could, we returned to Ireland on Monday.

Our frustration is minimal in the face of what the Palestinian people face daily and it was about not getting to Gaza, we are bit players in this. That Israel was able to enlist the cooperation of an EU government to stop the Flotilla demonstrates the extent of the siege of Gaza and the significance of the Freedom Flotilla and all actions to break it, from within and without Palestine. To see the Mubarak regime shut down the Gaza Freedom March was an eye-opener but to see the Greek government behave similarly absolutely highlights the need for civil society actions. 63 years of world government complicity in the oppression of the Palestinian people points us to different ways of acting- until we build for decent politics.

The Flotillas will continue until the siege of Gaza ends, direct civil society action and the call for BDS are key to supporting the Palestinian struggle – their resistance is central. We will sail again, venceremos! Hurriya, stay human – saoirse.

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