ISRAEL’S INTERCEPTION OF THE MADLEEN AND EGYPT’S CRACKDOWN ON THOUSANDS MARCHING
TO RAFAH WILL NOT STOP RESISTANCE TO SYSTEMATIC STARVATION
~ Josie Ó Súileabháin ~
During last week more than 4,000 people gathered in Cairo to march together by
foot to Gaza, demanding the immediate entry of the trucks of humanitarian aid
waiting at the border in Rafah for permission from the Israeli government. Some
came by plane from Europe, Asia and the Americas, and a thousand more travelled
with the Sumud Convoy from Algeria, across Libya and Egypt.
“We are all going to be accountable,” said Saif Abukeshek, one of the organisers
of the Global March to Gaza. “There is nothing going to be left of us if we are
going to just continue to be silent.”
On the first day of the march at two checkpoints on the Sinai Peninsular,
activists were detained and stopped from moving forwards, particularly at
Al-Ismailia checkpoint on June 13th. 1,000 people were stopped and some were
rounded up on buses by the police, who used force against those who wanted to
remain. At nightfall, the police sent in plainclothes agent provocateurs, who
attacked those sitting on the ground outside the checkpoint.
Videos shared by participants clearly show a group of men dressed in white,
followed by the police, throwing garbage and what seems to be water at the
activists. Egyptian authorities seized the passports of those trying to pass the
checkpoint and the security services were ordered to use violence in case the
protesters tried to force their way across it.
Photo: Jaber Jehad Badwan
Before the march had even begun, plain clothes police officers arrived at
Cairo’s hotels with a list of the names of those to be questioned, detained or
deported. Hundreds of people were detained at airports in Egypt, despite the
authorities giving no legal reason. No criminal charges have been brought
against any of those at the checkpoint, yet it is clear that Egypt has submitted
to the threats of military intervention by the Israeli defense minister.
“We came to stand with Gaza,” said Global March spokesperson Melanie Johanna
Schweizer, “and we are still standing. We will regroup, we will care for one
another and we will continue to carry this message forward. What we face here is
nothing compared to what Palestinians in Gaza face every day.”
SYSTEMATIC STARVATION
At the beginning of 2025, the criminalization of the United Nations Relief and
Works Agency for Palestinian refugees in the near east (UNRWA) came into effect
at the Knesset, prohibiting the UN agency from operating within the state of
Israel and the government from communicating with UNRWA. This was the time of
the ceasefire, when around 500-600 trucks of humanitarian aid were allowed to
enter the Gaza Strip.
Around a month later, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) was established in
both Delaware, USA and Geneva, Switzerland. Comprised of various shell companies
and informally advised by Tony Blair, the US-Israeli initiative replaced a
75-year humanitarian distribution network with a group of armed mercenaries.
Despite UNRWA having the personnel and community relationships for the effective
and safe administration of aid to a starving population from over 400 sites, the
GHF has instead set up four ‘mega-sites’ where humans are corralled into pens
and cages. There is not the supply for the demand, and more than 220
Palestinians have died while attempting to seek aid, according to the Gaza
Health Ministry.
Anwar Hamad is a 38 year old mother from the Jabalya Refugee Camp, and tells a
field researcher for B’Tselem in April of the conditions of her life and the
struggles for food.
“I am a clerk with UNRWA, but I can’t withdraw my salary from the bank because
there is no cash… the hunger we’re experiencing now is the worst we have faced
since the war began. It’s destroying us,” she says, “we all wonder around weak
and thin.”
“How long will this go on? I am just one of two million people trapped in the
Gaza Strip. We are facing bombings and killings, hunger and thirst… they have
turned us into people who dream only of food,” Anwer said.
A week before this interview, Israeli defense minister Israel Katz declared that
aid would continue to be blocked into Gaza, an admission of the use of
starvation as a weapon. Nine days later, the UN World Food Programme (WFP)
announced that all of it’s warehouses in Gaza were empty. Clearly starvation was
becoming a critical concern, so why did Israel ban the only effective aid
distribution system in Gaza?
“UNRWA,” said MK Edelstein at a committee hearing for the Knesset laws on the UN
agency, “beyond being a generator and active participant of terrorism, is also
an organisation for perpetuation of refugeehood.” The debates are classified,
although Edelstein allowed Kobi Samerano, father of the deceased Israeli hostage
Yonathan Samerano, to speak to the public.
“UNRWA had and still has the ability to return my son, but it chooses not to do
so. UNRWA is a terrorist organisation, whose workers took part in October 7,”
Kobi claims.
“I lost a lot of weight and my mental health was very bad,” Hala Sha’sha’ah
tells B’Tselem in Gaza City. “I didn’t have enough money to buy food and other
necessities. I borrowed some money from friends and relatives just to survive.
Sometimes we got food and sometimes we didn’t. But when the war resumed and the
crossing were closed again… the situation deteriorated in every sense.”
By the end of May, a group of Israelis lead by a member of the Knesset,
accompanied by the media and watched by the police – entered UNRWA’s compound in
East Jerusalem and declared the United Nations site in occupied Palestinian
territory a new Israeli neighborhood.
FRUIT OF A LIFETIME
Three years ago, Madelyn Culab looked out across the Mediterranean sea from the
fishing ports of Gaza City. Madelyn was pregnant and her hand rested on her
belly as she watched for her husband Khadr to return from fishing. The blockade
on Gaza has been imposed by Israel for almost two decades, including a ban on
fishing off the coast of the strip.
Madelyn has been fishing with her father since she was a child. “I would go out
to sea in the row boat and my father would wait for me on the beach. Then he got
sick and couldn’t walk anymore, so I started fishing alone to support my
family,” Madelyn tells Maram Humaid for Al-Jazeera.
After the 2014 massacre of 2,200 Palestinians in Gaza, many of the fishing boats
were damaged from Israeli airstrikes, including the engine of Khadr Bakr’s boat.
Without a vessel, he could not fish. This is when he met Madelyn, who said he
could use a ship that she had, and after they would go out fishing together,
watching each other’s back from the threat of interception by the Israeli navy.
Madelyn and Khadr fell in love.
“Fishing is beautiful, but it is so difficult in a place like the Gaza Strip’s
sea,” said Madelyn in 2022. Each time a vessel is damaged by Israel, they have
to borrow $10,000 to replace it. Yet the boat is vital for his source of income
and food. “It’s bad in Gaza,” she said, “and it’s getting worse.”
Photo: Jaber Jehad Badwan
In November 2023, Madelyn’s family were forced to evacuate from Gaza City to
Khan Younis, following instructions from the Israeli army that guaranteed their
safety. Humanitarian corridors were set up, and then bombed. Madelyn lived with
forty people in a small apartment when she went into labour.
“It was a difficult, brutal birth,” Madelyn recalls. “No pain relief, no medical
care. I was forced to leave the hospital right after giving birth. There were no
beds available because of the overwhelming number of wounded.”
From Khan Younis, Madelyn’s family escaped to Rafah, Deir el-Balah, Nuseirat and
then returned to Gaza City, where they now live in the remains of their
partially destroyed home. Israel has destroyed both their boats and a storage
room for fishing equipment. “We’ve lost everything,” Madelyn says, “the fruit of
a lifetime… now fish is too expensive if you can find it at all.”
“Only a few fishermen still have any gear left, and they risk their lives just
to catch a little, everything has changed. We now crave fish in the middle of
the famine we’re living through,” she says.
Madelyn would become the inspiration for the naming of the alternatively spelled
‘Madleen’ – a UK-flagged vessel that travelled across the Mediterranean Sea from
Palermo, Sicily to the coast of the Gaza Strip. Onboard were 12 people from
France, Germany, Netherlands, Brazil, Spain and Turkey, including the journalist
Yanis Mhamdi, carrying with them symbolic aid to be brought to the two million
starving in Gaza.
The symbolism was the act of breaking a siege on humanitarian aid. Yanis writes
from his prison cell in Israel about the events that unfolded. “At around 2am on
Monday June 9, the Israeli army stormed the boat, which was in international
waters. The attack came without warning after sending us drones, the soldiers
boarded the boat.”
The quadcopter drones were reported to spray an unknown white chemical irritant
across the whole ship, as they were surrounded by sea by the Israeli navy. “One
of (the soldiers) pointed his gun at me and threatened to shoot if I didn’t
lower the camera,” Yanis recalls. They were held out at sea for a number of
hours in the cold, and then “once the sun was at it’s peak” they were held in
the heat of the cabins.
After being transferred to Ashdod port, they were searched and taken into
custody. “Luckily, I was in the cell with the other members of the sailboat…
luckily we’re all together. It keeps us from cracking. On Wednesday June 11, the
guards took Tiago (Ávila)… to solitary confinement because he refused to eat.”
HOSTAGE TAKING
Eight of the twelve passengers onboard the Madleen were immediately detained
following their refusal to ‘confess’ to attempting to enter Israel illegally.
Four were deported.
French citizen Rima Hassan was placed in solitary confinement after writing
‘free Palestine’ on the walls on the prison. Brazilian Citizen Thiago Ávila was
placed in solitary after going on hunger strike. All were threatened with the
denial of legal council, and were kept incommunicado from their friends and
loved ones while incarcerated.
Despite this, Thiago managed to send a letter to his 1 year old daughter from
prison. “I’m sorry I’m not around with you these days but daddy has been trying
to bring food to other children as beautiful as you, who unfortunately are being
starved by people who don’t understand that every single human being has the
right to live free,” he wrote in a letter read publicly by his wife Lara.
“Your father is one of the millions of people who are now doing something to
stop the biggest violation of our generation… doing demonstrations, disrupting
around factories, breaking the media blockades, and boycotts, and especially
every Palestinian who has been living eight decades of genocide,” Thiago wrote.
Photo: Jaber Jehad Badwan
After the deportation of nine activists, only three remain in prison including
Yanis. “According to my lawyer,” he said, “I’m the last to go home, so that it
will serve as an example to the next journalists.” He was supposed to leave on
the 13th, but the military escalation with Iran and temporarily shutting Israeli
airports served as a reason for more than a month longer in detention. As proven
in recent events, they could travel by land, or by sea, to leave Israel.
“This is not detention,” write the Freedom Flotilla Coalition in a statement,
“this is hostage taking.”
After intense pressure, the Israeli government quietly released three of the
last flotilla prisoners across the border to Jordan. The Global March to Gaza
has been prevented from entering the Sinai, as the Egyptian authorities too hold
a responsibility for the genocide on their borders. “These are people who
refused to stand by as international law is continuously violated and a genocide
is carried out against the
Palestinian people,” said Schweizer.
“They chose to act, peacefully and within the law, to uphold the principles the
world claims to stand
for,” she added. “The actions taken by both march organizess and Egyptian
authorities brought global embassies face-to-face with the political and moral
imperative their citizens see in ending the Palestinian genocide.”
“We’re once again living in fear and panic, with no security,” Hala Sha’sha’ah
told B’Tselem. “The markets are now empty again and we’re suffering from
hunger.”
“Our suffering is immense. Our lives have been reduced to survival,” Hala says,
“every day is a struggle to figure out how we’ll get food and water, what we’ll
burn for a cooking fire, how we’ll get cash. Everything is so difficult. Now,
100 shekels is worth what 10 shekels used to be before the war. You can’t buy
almost anything here now with 100 shekels.”
“If the crossings stay closed and the war continues, we will die”
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Top photo: Global March to Gaza
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