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The fact that Israel was forced, substantially under the pressure of the UN
resolution demanding the release of all those seized in international waters
by Israeli commandos, to release them rapidly is not just a victory ifor
elementary human rights. It is a big blow Israel government attempts to
impose their own version of the events, as a kind of attempted "holocaust"
by people seeking to destroy Israel (that is, according to the Israeli
government, the Jew), is facing direct challenges point by point.

This is one of many accumulating examples. The point is not whether this
forces the US to modify its policies (although this is happening to a
limited degree, that is not the area where the most important changes are
taking place. US policy will only change decisively as the accumulating
changes and the rising re-mobilization of the Palestinians and their allies,
including in Israel, makes the defeat of the Zionist, increasingly
apartheid-like state, inevitable.

For now, the test is how the motion around this crime changes the
relationship of forces between the Palestinians and their pro-imperialist
and imperialist foes.
Fred Feldman

http://www.salon.com/news/israel_flotilla_attack/index.html?story=/news/feat
ure/2010/06/03/paul_larudee_flotilla_account
Thursday, Jun 3, 2010 17:55 ET

Captured and detained by Israel, an American tells his story
After two days in an Israeli jail, 64-year-old Paul Larudee speaks out
By Anika Anand

Sixty-four-year-old Paul Larudee, an American citizen and longtime
pro-Palestinian activist, was on board one of the ships carrying
humanitarian relief to Gaza that was raided by the Israeli navy on Monday.
He dove into the Mediterranean Sea, only to be captured and held in an
Israeli prison for two days.

This was not Larudee's first brush with Israeli authorities, but it was
easily his most dramatic. He spoke with Salon about the raid and his
captivity this afternoon from Greece, where he arrived after being released
by Israel.

At around 4 A.M. on Monday, Larudee's ship was boarded by as many as 500
Israeli soldiers. After the ship's captain called an alert, Larudee
immediately walked out onto the deck and found that Israeli soldiers had
broken the windows of the wheel house (the area where the captain controls
the ship) in an attempt to take command of the vessel. As Larudee and
several others tried to defend the wheel house, Israeli soldiers tased him
twice so that he would back away from the area. He said he offered no
resistance and just let his body go limp.

"I have never struck anyone in more than 20 years," he said. "I was beaten.
There is black and blue all over my body. They inflicted pain on me on a
frequent basis because I did not recognize their authority."

Everyone on all of the ships was completely unarmed, he said. However, on
the Turkish ship -- where the civilian fatalities occurred -- some
passengers clashed with the soldiers and tried to beat them up as they
descended on the ship. (Larudee was on a different vessel.) "But that is
akin to what the passengers on the hijacked 9/11 did to hijackers who had
taken the aircraft," he said. "In other words, they resisted someone who was
invading their ship."

After some time, Larudee decided to jump off the ship and to try to swim
away from the Israeli forces.

"I knew it would be a way to slow down what they were doing," he said. "It
caused the ship to stop for an hour or possibly longer and it kept another
ship occupied for several hours actually."

He hoped this would create a diversion that would allow another ship to make
its way to Gaza with the humanitarian aid. "It was worth doing that, but I
paid a price for it."

When the Israeli forces picked him up, Larudee said, he was severely beaten
and tied to a mast at the stern of their ship. His legs and hands were bound
as he was subjected to the hot sun in wet soaking clothes for four hours. He
said his body almost went into shock from the extreme hot and cold
conditions.

The soldiers refused to release him unless he told them his name. He
repeatedly refused, but said he would cooperate only if they released him
from the mast. They finally agreed and took him below deck. "For the
remainder of the trip to the port, we got along fine," he said.

When on land, Larudee was taken to the processing area, but refused to
cooperate with authorities, who wanted him to say that he entered the
country illegally. "This happened at 18 miles at sea, which is well beyond
their own territorial waters, or anyone's territorial waters," he said. "We
were in international waters. We weren't violating anyone's sovereignty or
breaking any rules that we knew of, even by their standards."

More beating ensued. Larudee, who again let his body go limp, said he was
carried by nylon restraints, which were placed on his arms and legs. They
cut into his skin, causing more contusions and deep pain. He was carried
into an ambulance and taken to a hospital, but wasn't treated. He said he
believes he was taken there because the Israeli soldiers didn't want the
media to see his black eye, pronated joints, bruised jaw and body
contusions.

Then, he was transported to the hospital ward of a prison, and eventually
into an isolated cell. He was forbidden to speak with other prisoners,
denied an attorney, a phone call, and access to television, radio, paper,
pencils -- anything else that would connect him to the outside world. A
diabetic, Larudee was eventually granted a request to be moved to a cell
with windows and some air circulation.

He spent a total of two days in the prison, and on the second day, was
granted a ten-minute meeting with a representative from the U.S. embassy.
Before the meeting, he was given a long sleeve shirt to wear, but refused to
put it on.

On the third day, the captain of Larudee's boat, a Greek national who was
sharing the same prison cell, met with the representative from his embassy.
The Greek embassy official helped arrange for Laurudee to leave Israel for
Greece. After arriving at the airport for his, Larudee was told that Israeli
authorities had wouldn't permit him to go directly to Athens. Instead, they
insisted that he fly first to Istanbul, then sign a release. Larudee refused
to cooperate and was once again subjected to a beating by Israeli soldiers.

"But this time they did it in front of 30 to 40 other prisoners, who had
seen similar things," he said. "They went nuts."

An all-out brawl began and some prisoners were badly beaten, Larudee said.

Those who had arranged for Larudee's transport to Greece eventually
intervened and negotiated with airport officials. Larudee was finally
allowed to leave Israel. He's now in Greece, where he says he's staying with
friends who are taking care of him. He is scheduled to fly home to the
states on June 11.

"A lot of Americans are looking at Israel through rose-colored glasses," he
said. "Israel is not a demon, but it is not being held accountable for its
actions, and when you do that, it allows bad things, very bad things, to
happen."



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