Six Australian Gaza flotilla detainees freed by Israel

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Nick Wilson

Six Australians detained by the Israeli military while attempting to take aid to Gaza have been released in Crete after days at sea.

The activists were among more than 100 people involved in a second Global Sumud Flotilla, attempting to break an Israeli naval blockade.

Australian flotilla member Ethan Floyd (front) in early April before leaving Sydney for Italy.Steven Siewert

They were released on Crete after being intercepted off the coast of the Greek island by the Israel Defence Forces on Wednesday.

Organisers of the flotilla said three Australians, Ethan Floyd, Zack Schofield and Neve O’Connor, were taken to hospital for injuries after being released.

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They say they were subjected to violence and mistreated on board the Israeli vessel.

“We three are all physically OK as you can be after that experience,” the trio said in a video message from Sitia hospital in Crete.

All 173 international activists were released except for two leaders of the flotilla, Thiago Ávila from Brazil, and Saif Abu Keshek from Spain, organisers said.

Floyd, Schofield and O’Connor said they would hunger strike until the health and whereabouts of the remaining detainees was confirmed.

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Israel’s foreign affairs minister Gideon Sa’ar confirmed the vessels had been intercepted but insisted participants were unharmed.

“All participants in the provocative flotilla who were taken off the vessels were taken off unharmed,” he said on X.

The vessels were seized in international waters off Greece’s Peloponnese peninsula, hundreds of kilometres from Gaza, organisers said.

Surya McEwen, Cameron Tribe and Bianca Webb-Pullman round out the six Australian detainees. Seventeen were known to participate in the flotilla.

Organisers claim the IDF’s actions were unlawful as they occurred in international waters far from Gaza.

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“This is piracy,” the Global Sumud Flotilla said in a statement.

“This is the unlawful seizure of human beings on the open sea near Crete, an assertion that Israel can operate with total impunity, far beyond its own borders, with no consequences.”

Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the two remaining detainees had been brought to Israel for questioning.

“Saif Abu Keshek, suspected of affiliation with a terrorist organisation and Thiago Ávila suspected of illegal activity, will be brought to Israel for questioning,” it said on X.

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Organisers called for their immediate release.

“We demand that all governments do all they can to pressure the Israeli regime to release all the illegal abductees,” the Global Sumud Flotilla said.

Seven Australians were detained by the IDF during the previous Sumud flotilla in October.

Israel controls access to the Gaza Strip and denies withholding supplies for the region’s two million residents.

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But Palestinian and international aid bodies claim supplies to the territory are insufficient despite guarantees of increased aid.

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, which has been contacted, has previously urged Australians not to participate in breaches of Israel’s blockade.

Sydneysiders are set to paddle on Sydney Harbour on Sunday to show support for the flotilla.

AAP

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Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: www.smh.com.au