Sunday, May 23, 2010
Aid convoy sets off for Gaza
Source: Al Jazeera
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2010/05/2010522133016818451.html
The biggest attempt by international aid groups to break the Israeli siege on the Gaza Strip has gotten underway.
Nine ships under the banner, Freedom Flotilla, began their journey to Gaza on Saturday, despite warnings from Israel that they will be stopped for "breaching Israeli law".
The vessels are carrying 5,000 tonnes of reconstruction materials, school supplies and medical equipment.
The biggest of the nine ships set off from Istanbul, Turkey, heading to the south western city of Antalya where two other Turkish ships will be waiting to join the convoy.
The three ships will then travel to the waters off Athens and Crete to rendezvous with the other six, before making the four-day journey to Gaza.
'Emotional issue'
Al Jazeera's Anita McNaught, reporting from Istanbul, said Turkey has high hopes for the flotilla as Gaza is an issue close to their hearts.
"It has been a very emotional evening in Istanbul. The issue of Gaza moves Turks more than any other single issue," McNaught said.
"It has severely coloured the government's relationship with Israel and many Turks feel a community spirit and sense of responsibility for the situation in Gaza."
Mohammad Sawalha, the vice president of the international committee to break the siege of Gaza, one of the organisers of the mission, told Al Jazeera that a global movement, made up of people who want to send the message that the situation in Gaza is unacceptable, was growing.
"We are trying to send a message to everybody that the situation in Gaza will not go on," Sawalha said.
"No one can accept what is going on now in Gaza - preventing people from having the food and medicine they need. This is a crime."
The convoy is from the UK, Ireland, Algeria, Kuwait, Greece and Turkey, and is comprised of 800 people from 50 nationalities. It is made up of three cargo ships and five passengers boats.
Israeli objection
A senior Israeli official has warned the activists that their flotilla of cargo ships and passenger boats will be stopped from entering Gaza.
Naor Gilon, a deputy director general at the foreign ministry, said the action would be a "provocation and breach of Israeli law".
A statement from Israel's foreign ministry said it had "no intention of allowing the flotilla into Gaza" but has not elaborated on what measures could be used to stop them.
Representatives from six organisations, including the European Campaign to End the Siege in Gaza (EGESG), said they were determined to enter the area regardless of pressure from Israel.
"Israel should not be under any illusion whatsoever that their threats or intimidation will stop us or even that their violence against us will stop us," Huwaida Arraf, from the Free Gaza Movement, said.
Kahel Mazen, from EGESG, added: "If they [the Israelis] choose to resort to destruction and death, our mission is to try to open a window of hope for the people of Gaza."
Israel says the blockade aims to prevent Hamas, the political movement that controls Gaza, from acquiring weapons or materials that could be used for military purposes.
For the majority of Gaza's population of 1.5 million people, the result has been impoverished living conditions.
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