29-03-2024 05:40 PM Jerusalem Timing

IOF Seizes Gaza Flotilla Flagship

IOF Seizes Gaza Flotilla Flagship

The Zionist occupation forces (IOF) announced that they intercepted and searched the vessel which had tried to "breach the maritime blockade."

Palestine: Swedish boat MarianneContact has been lost with the Swedish boat Marianne, which had been leading the Gaza-bound Freedom Flotilla, after other boats turned back. The Zionist occupation forces (IOF) announced that they intercepted and searched the vessel which had tried to "breach the maritime blockade."

The Freedom Flotilla Coalition lost contact with the flagship of the flotilla at 10:57pm GMT, the organization said. The vessel was some 100 nautical miles from its destination at when it happened.

The Zionist navy has engaged the vessel, boarded and searched it, the IOF spokesman Peter Lerner confirmed. He said the Marian is now being escorted to Ashdod Port after ignoring "repeated appeals to change course."

The occupation government ordered the navy to “redirect” the vessel only after “exhausting all diplomatic channels,” IOF claimed in a statement.

After the Marianne crew refused to change the course, the naval forces “visited and searched the vessel” and “reported that use of force was unnecessary, and that the process was uneventful.”

“The vessel is currently being escorted to Ashdod Port and is expected to arrive within 12-24 hours,” the statement added.

Earlier, the Coalition confirmed that three vessels which are part of the flotilla turned back to their ports of origin, as was part of the original plan.

“The three sailing boats accompanying and supporting the “Marianne” (“Rachel”, “Vittorio” and “Juliano II”) are changing their course and will be heading back to their ports of origin,” it announced.

“Political representatives, journalists, peace activists on board, a total number of 29 sailors, have assisted the Marianne and its people towards their long and difficult journey, which has always remained to end the illegal and inhumane blockade of Gaza.”

The four vessels which departed from various ports in Greece on Saturday attempted to break the eight-year long Palestinian blockade, a news release on the campaign’s official webpage said. This time, some 70 people were on board, including former Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki and Spanish MEP Ana Maria Miranda Paza.

Senior Zionist officials said on Sunday they would not allow the boats to reach the shores of Gaza.

"The Foreign Ministry and all other relevant bodies, mostly the IDF (Israel Defense Forces) and the Prime Minister’s Office, are fully prepared for the arrival of the flotilla. We are ready for every possible scenario," the ministry's spokesperson Emmanuel Nahshon said on Sunday, as quoted by 'The Times of Israel' daily.

"It won’t reach Gaza," he announced. "The State of Israel won’t let that happen," the official said.

On Wednesday, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he believed "a flotilla will not help to address the dire situation in Gaza," but urged Zionist entity to "lift all closures, with due consideration of Israel's legitimate security concerns."

While the Zionist authorities claim the blockade is intended to prevent Hamas resistance faction from getting weapons, the flotilla only had humanitarian aid set to be delivered to the people of Gaza.

A number of politicians and activists in the Zionist entity do not support such uncompromising position, arguing that the flotilla is peaceful and poses no danger to the country's security.

"Sending in troops could further seal Israel's image as an aggressor," The Times of Israel said, citing a former Knesset member and prominent far-left activist Uri Avnery.

In 2010, a similar attempt to break the blockade with the "Freedom Flotilla" ended in bloodshed. IOF troops then boarded a Gaza-bound vessel in international waters. Nine pro-Palestinian activists were killed during the raid.