Ten dead as Israel storms aid ships
[image: Photo]
7:46am EDT

By Jeffrey 
Heller<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=jeffrey.heller&;>and
Alastair
Macdonald<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=alastair.macdonald&;>

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli commandos stormed a convoy of Gaza-bound aid
ships on Monday and more than 10 of the mostly international activists
aboard were killed, provoking a diplomatic crisis and Palestinian charges of
a "massacre."

The violent end to a Turkish-backed attempt to break Israel's blockade of
the Gaza Strip by six ships carrying some 600 people and 10,000 tonnes of
supplies raised an outcry across the Middle East and far beyond.

As the navy escorted the vessels into Israel's port of Ashdod, accounts
remained sketchy of the pre-dawn interception out in the Mediterranean, in
which marines stormed aboard from dinghies and rappelled down from
helicopters. Israel said "more than 10" activists died. Israeli media spoke
of up to 19 dead.

The bloodshed sparked street protests and government ire in Turkey, long
Israel's lone Muslim ally in the region, which had supported the convoy.
Ankara recalled its ambassador from Israel and Turkish President Abdullah
Gul demanded that the culprits be punished.

The European Union demanded an inquiry and France and Germany said they were
"shocked." The United Nations condemned violence against civilians in
international waters.

Israeli officials said the marines were met with gunfire and knives when
they boarded the ships, which included a large ferry flying the Turkish
flag. Activists seized at least two pistols from the boarding party, the
officials said.

Israel's attempts to maintain its three-year-old blockade on the Hamas
Islamist-ruled enclave while avoiding bloodshed that would spark an
international incident collapsed in spectacular fashion: "It's going to be a
big scandal, no doubt about it," Israel's Trade Minister Binyamin
Ben-Eliezer told Reuters.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said: "What Israel has committed on
board the Freedom Flotilla was a massacre." He declared three days of
official mourning for the dead.

Israel's deputy foreign minister, Danny Ayalon, blamed the activists for the
violence and branded them allies of Israel's Islamist enemies Hamas and al
Qaeda. Had they got through, he said, they would have opened an arms
smuggling route to Gaza.

There was no question of easing the blockade, he said.

In a statement, the Israeli military said that in addition to the dead,
numerous activists and five soldiers were injured.

Israeli signal jamming and military censorship prevented much independent
reporting of the drama at sea.

Turkish television aired video apparently showing a commando shinning down a
rope and clashing with a man wielding a stick.

Israeli television showed video of an activist apparently trying to stab a
soldier.

HIGH ALERT, PEACE TALKS DOUBT

Israeli forces were on high alert on the Gaza, Syrian and Lebanese borders
as well as around Jerusalem, the occupied West Bank and areas of northern
Israel where much of the country's Arab population lives. Israeli officials
denied reports that a leading Israeli Arab Islamist had been killed on the
convoy.

Angry Palestinians gathered in Ramallah, their West Bank center, and near a
checkpoint to Jerusalem, which Israel closed.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was in Ottawa. Officials said he was
considering whether to cancel a White House meeting on Tuesday with U.S.
President Barack Obama and fly home early.

Those talks had been expected to focus on U.S. efforts to move along
tentative negotiations with Abbas. But peace talks, mediated by Obama's
envoy, seem unlikely to continue for now.

Israel's Arab enemy Syria, which hosts exiled leaders of the Hamas movement
that rules Gaza, called for an emergency Arab League meeting. The
Cairo-based League condemned what it called Israel's "terrorist act."
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called it "inhuman" and evidence of
the Jewish state's weakness.

More worryingly for Israel, its allies were unlikely to show much sympathy.
The Turkish government, long Israel's lone friend in the Muslim Middle East,
"strongly protested." It marked a new low in an already crumbling Israeli
relationship with Ankara.

"Israel will have to suffer the consequences of this behavior," a Turkish
Foreign Ministry statement said.

Some 300 demonstrators chanted anti-Israeli slogans outside the Jewish
state's Istanbul consulate. Police kept them at bay. The Israeli government
advised Israeli tourists in Turkey to stay in their hotels.

Greece, which had citizens aboard the convoy, halted a joint naval exercise
with Israel and summoned the Israeli ambassador in Athens. Ireland, with
citizens also engaged in the venture, said it was "gravely concerned."

U.N. officials responsible for aid in Gaza said: "We are shocked by reports
of killings and injuries of people on board boats carrying supplies for
Gaza, apparently in international waters. We condemn the violence and call
for it to stop."

"Such tragedies are entirely avoidable if Israel heeds the repeated calls of
the international community to end its counterproductive and unacceptable
blockade of Gaza."

DEFIANCE, AID REQUESTS

The convoy set off from international waters near Cyprus on Sunday in
defiance of warnings that it would be intercepted. Israel had hoped to end
the operation without bloodshed and had prepared air-conditioned tents at
Ashdod for detainees.

Netanyahu's spokesman Mark Regev said: "We made repeated offers that they
should bring the boats to the port of Ashdod and from there we guaranteed
that all humanitarian cargo would be transferred to the people of Gaza."

Greta Berlin, a spokeswoman for the Free Gaza Movement that organized the
convoy, said: "How could the Israeli military attack civilians like this? Do
they think that because they can attack Palestinians indiscriminately they
can attack anyone?"

Israel's Western allies have been critical of the embargo on the 1.5 million
people of Gaza, which the Jewish state says is aimed at preventing arms
supplies from reaching Hamas.

Turkey and Arab states were highly critical of Israel's attack on Gaza 18
months ago, in which 1,400 Palestinians died.

The United Nations and Western powers have urged Israel to ease its
restrictions to prevent a humanitarian crisis and allow for postwar
reconstruction. Israel says food, medicine and medical equipment are allowed
in regularly.

(Writing by Alastair Macdonald, Additional reporting by Michele
Kambas<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=michele.kambas&;>in
Nicosia and Tulay Karadeniz in Ankara bureau; editing by Paul
Taylor<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=paul.taylor&;>
)

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