(Reuters) – Pro-Palestinian activists aboard a six-ship convoy sailing for the Gaza Strip have ignored orders by the Israeli navy to turn back, an Israeli official said Monday.
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The official, who declined to be named, said Israeli naval vessels told the activists by radio that their only other option was to head for the Israeli port of Ashdod to unload the some 10,000 tonnes of aid, which Israel would then transfer to Gaza.
“We communicated with them using the radio, clarifying that they are heading toward an area that is closed to maritime traffic,” the official said.
The convoy, led by a Turkish vessel with 600 people on board, set off in international waters off Cyprus Sunday in defiance of an Israeli-led blockade of the Gaza Strip and warnings that it would be intercepted.
“We told them that they are welcome to dock in Israel where all their humanitarian goods will be transferred to the Gaza Strip,” the official said. “The flotilla ignored the warnings.”
Live video footage from one of the boats showed activists wearing life vests and one said he could see Israeli naval vessels in the vicinity. He said the Israeli navy had contacted the ship’s captain and ordered him to turn back.
Three Israeli naval vessels set out from Haifa to meet the convoy, a journalist aboard one of the ships said.
Israel has said it would prevent the convoy from reaching the Gaza Strip, which is run by the Islamist Hamas group.
Hamas has been preparing to receive the convoy at the small harbor in the city of Gaza.
The activists face arrest and deportation, and their cargo will be confiscated and examined before a possible transfer by Israel to Gaza, Israeli military officials have said.
Israel has set up a holding camp for the activists at the coastal city of Ashdod.
The flotilla was organized by pro-Palestinian groups and a Turkish human rights organization. Turkey has urged Israel to allow it safe passage and says the 10,000 tonnes of aid the convoy is carrying is humanitarian.
Israel and Egypt tightened a blockade on Gaza after Hamas took over the territory in 2007. Israel launched a devastating military offensive in Gaza in December 2008 with the aim of halting daily rocket fire toward its cities.
Most of the 1.5 million Palestinians living in Gaza rely on aid, blaming Israel for imposing restrictions on the amount and type of goods it allows into the territory.
The United Nations and Western powers have urged Israel to ease its restrictions to prevent a humanitarian crisis. They have been urging Israel to let in concrete and steel to allow for postwar reconstruction.
Israel denies there is a humanitarian crisis in Gaza, saying food, medicine and medical equipment are allowed in regularly. It says the restrictions are necessary to prevent weapons and materials that could be used to make them from reaching Hamas.
(Reporting by Joseph Nasr, Jihan Abdallah and Alastair Macdonald in Jerusalem, Michele Kambas in Cyprus and Nidal al-Mughrabi in Gaza; Writing by Joseph Nasr)
New years’ halt to Sri Lanka fighting: president
COLOMBO (Reuters) – Sri Lanka’s president on Sunday ordered the military not to attack the Tamil Tigers during a two-day holiday in order to allow thousands of civilians to escape a no-fire zone where they are being held by the separatists.
Soldiers have encircled the remnants of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in a 17 square km (6 sq mile) no-fire zone on the northeast coast, and are close to crushing them as a conventional force and ending Asia’s longest-running civil wars.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa said that people should be “given uninhibited freedom of movement from the no-fire zone” in the Sinhala and Tamil New Year period on Monday and Tuesday.
“With this objective in view, His Excellency has directed the armed forces of the state to restrict their operations during the New Year to those of a defensive nature,” the presidential statement said.
There was no immediate comment from the LTTE, whose agreement to let the people go is essential. The United Nations and witnesses say people are being kept as human shields and forced conscripts or being shot as they try to flee.
In late January, Rajapaksa gave a 48-hour window of safe passage to civilians and urged the Tigers to let them go, but the rebels refused.
The LTTE so far has refused any diplomatic entreaties to get them to let people leave whom they insist are staying by choice.
Diplomats have been working furiously to negotiate an exit strategy for the people, who number 60,000 according to the government and around 100,000, according to the United Nations.
Rajapaksa again urged the LTTE to surrender.
“In the true spirit of the season, it is timely for the LTTE to acknowledge its military defeat and lay down its weapons and surrender. The LTTE must also renounce terrorism and violence permanently,” the statement said.
The Tigers have vowed not to give up their fight for a separate nation for Sri Lanka’s Tamil minority, which has engulfed the Indian Ocean island nation in a civil war that has killed at least 70,000 since 1983.
Since LTTE fighters wear vials of cyanide in case of capture, surrender is seen as unlikely despite the overwhelming military firepower facing them.
The mediators of Sri Lanka’s peace process — the United States, Britain, Norway and Japan — on Friday urged the Tigers to end the “futile fighting” and urged the military not to fire into the no-fire zone so the civilians will be safe.
The military denies shooting into civilian areas and says claims it does are Tiger propaganda. It has also refused all calls for a ceasefire, saying the Tigers repeatedly have used them to regroup to fight another day.
In the latest of a series of international demonstrations over the war, around 100,000 people marched through London on Saturday to demand a ceasefire between Sri Lankan forces and the Tigers.
The march through central London, organized by a British Tamil group, was the biggest yet in a week of demonstrations by Tamils and their supporters in various cities.
(Writing by Bryson Hull; Editing by Jerry Norton)