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Monday, June 23, 2025

Israel deports Greta Thunberg after seizing ship

by

13 days ago
20250610
Activist Greta Thunberg arrives from Israel at Charles de Gaulle airport, north of Paris, Tuesday, June 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

Activist Greta Thunberg arrives from Israel at Charles de Gaulle airport, north of Paris, Tuesday, June 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

Michel Euler

Is­rael de­port­ed ac­tivist Gre­ta Thun­berg on Tues­day, a day af­ter the Gaza-bound ship she was on was seized by the Is­raeli mil­i­tary.

Speak­ing up­on ar­rival in Paris en route to her home coun­try of Swe­den, Thun­berg called for the re­lease of the oth­er ac­tivists who were de­tained aboard the Madleen. She de­scribed a “quite chaot­ic and un­cer­tain” sit­u­a­tion dur­ing the de­ten­tion.

The con­di­tions they faced “are ab­solute­ly noth­ing com­pared to what peo­ple are go­ing through in Pales­tine and es­pe­cial­ly Gaza right now,” she said. The trip was meant to protest Is­raeli re­stric­tions on aid to Gaza’s pop­u­la­tion of over 2 mil­lion peo­ple af­ter 20 months of war, ac­cord­ing to the Free­dom Flotil­la Coali­tion, the group be­hind the jour­ney.

“We were well aware of the risks of this mis­sion,” Thun­berg said. “The aim was to get to Gaza and to be able to dis­trib­ute the aid.” She said the ac­tivists would con­tin­ue try­ing to get aid to Gaza.

On Mon­day, U.S. Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump called Thun­berg “a young an­gry per­son” and rec­om­mend­ed she take anger man­age­ment class­es.

“I think the world need a lot more young an­gry women,” Thun­berg said Tues­day in re­sponse.

Thun­berg said it ap­peared she was head­ed back to Swe­den, hadn’t had ac­cess to a phone in a few days and want­ed a show­er. The ac­tivists were held sep­a­rate­ly and some had trou­ble ac­cess­ing lawyers, she added.

Asked why she agreed to de­por­ta­tion, she said, “Why would I want to stay in an Is­raeli prison more than nec­es­sary?”

Thun­berg called on sup­port­ers to ask their gov­ern­ments “to de­mand not on­ly hu­man­i­tar­i­an aid be­ing let in­to Gaza but most im­por­tant­ly an end to the oc­cu­pa­tion and an end to the sys­temic op­pres­sion and vi­o­lence that Pales­tini­ans are fac­ing on an every­day ba­sis.”

She said rec­og­niz­ing Pales­tine is “the very, very, very min­i­mum” that gov­ern­ments can do to help.

Oth­er ac­tivists face de­por­ta­tion

Thun­berg was one of 12 pas­sen­gers on the Madleen. Is­raeli naval forces seized the boat with­out in­ci­dent ear­ly Mon­day about 200 kilo­me­tres (125 miles) off Gaza.

The Free­dom Flotil­la Coali­tion, along with rights groups, said Is­rael’s ac­tions in in­ter­na­tion­al wa­ters were a vi­o­la­tion of in­ter­na­tion­al law. Is­rael re­jects that charge, say­ing such ships in­tend to breach what it ar­gues is a law­ful naval block­ade of Gaza.

Is­rael viewed the ship as a pub­lic­i­ty stunt, call­ing it the “self­ie yacht” with a “mea­gre” amount of aid that amount­ed to less than a truck­load.

The Free­dom Flotil­la Coali­tion said three ac­tivists, in­clud­ing Thun­berg, had been de­port­ed along with a jour­nal­ist. It said it had en­cour­aged some to do it so they could speak freely about their ex­pe­ri­ences.

“Their de­ten­tion is un­law­ful, po­lit­i­cal­ly mo­ti­vat­ed and a di­rect vi­o­la­tion of in­ter­na­tion­al law,” the coali­tion said in a state­ment. Eight oth­er pas­sen­gers re­fused de­por­ta­tion and are be­ing de­tained at Givon prison in Ram­le. On Tues­day, Is­raeli au­thor­i­ties heard their cas­es at a de­ten­tion tri­bunal.

“We ar­gued to­day, and that al­so was em­pha­sized by all the ac­tivists, that their goal is to en­ter hu­man­i­tar­i­an aid to Gaza, to end the famine and to end a geno­cide in Gaza,” said Lub­na Tu­ma, a lawyer with le­gal rights group Adalah, who is rep­re­sent­ing the ac­tivists. “Any vi­o­la­tion or any pro­hi­bi­tion to en­ter­ing the hu­man­i­tar­i­an aid to Gaza is deep­en­ing the com­plic­i­ty of Is­rael in the famine in Gaza.”

Le­gal rep­re­sen­ta­tives for the group said that be­cause Is­raeli seized their ves­sel in in­ter­na­tion­al wa­ters and forcibly trans­port­ed them to Is­raeli ter­ri­to­ry, Is­rael had no au­thor­i­ty to de­tain or de­port them.

‘Pi­rate at­tack’

Sabine Had­dad, a spokes­woman for Is­rael’s In­te­ri­or Min­istry, said the ac­tivists who were be­ing de­port­ed Tues­day had waived their right to ap­pear be­fore a judge. The oth­ers have a hear­ing with the judge and will be held for 96 hours be­fore be­ing de­port­ed, she said.

Ri­ma Has­san, a French mem­ber of the Eu­ro­pean Par­lia­ment who is of Pales­tin­ian de­scent, was among the pas­sen­gers. She has pre­vi­ous­ly been barred from en­ter­ing Is­rael be­cause of her op­po­si­tion to Is­raeli poli­cies to­ward the Pales­tini­ans. It was not clear whether she was be­ing im­me­di­ate­ly de­port­ed or de­tained.

French For­eign Min­is­ter Jean-Noel Bar­rot said one of the de­tained French ac­tivists signed an ex­pul­sion or­der and would leave Tues­day. The oth­er five re­fused. He said all the ac­tivists re­ceived con­sular vis­its.

Ser­gio Toribio, a Span­ish ac­tivist, slammed Is­rael’s ac­tions af­ter he ar­rived in Barcelona.

“It is un­for­giv­able, it is a vi­o­la­tion of our rights. It is a pi­rate at­tack in in­ter­na­tion­al wa­ters,” he told re­porters.

Block­ade of Gaza

Pales­tini­ans in Gaza are now al­most com­plete­ly de­pen­dent on in­ter­na­tion­al aid.

Is­rael and Egypt have im­posed vary­ing de­grees of a block­ade on Gaza since Hamas seized pow­er from ri­val Pales­tin­ian forces in 2007. Is­rael says the block­ade is need­ed to pre­vent Hamas from im­port­ing arms, while crit­ics say it amounts to col­lec­tive pun­ish­ment of Gaza’s Pales­tin­ian pop­u­la­tion.

Dur­ing the 20-month-long war in Gaza, Is­rael has re­strict­ed and some­times blocked all aid in­to the ter­ri­to­ry, in­clud­ing food, fu­el and med­i­cine. Ex­perts say that pol­i­cy has pushed Gaza to­ward famine. Is­rael as­serts that Hamas siphons off the aid to bol­ster its rule.

Hamas-led mil­i­tants killed around 1,200 peo­ple, most­ly civil­ians, in the Oct. 7, 2023, at­tack that ig­nit­ed the war and took 251 hostages, most re­leased in cease­fire agree­ments or oth­er deals. Hamas still holds 55 hostages, more than half be­lieved to be dead.

Is­rael’s mil­i­tary cam­paign has killed more than 54,000 Pales­tini­ans, ac­cord­ing to the Gaza Health Min­istry, which doesn’t dis­tin­guish be­tween civil­ians and com­bat­ants but has said women and chil­dren make up most of the dead.

The war has de­stroyed vast ar­eas of Gaza and dis­placed around 90% of the ter­ri­to­ry’s pop­u­la­tion.

JERUSALEM (AP) —

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