JERUSALEM/ANKARA, (Reuters) – Israel, facing mounting international outrage at its raid on an aid convoy sailing to Gaza, said yesterday that it would expel all activists seized on the ships and dropped threats to prosecute some of them.
Israel had said it would deport 682 activists from over 35 countries, seized during the assault in which nine activists were killed on a Turkish vessel, but the police minister had said some might be prosecuted for assaulting Israeli marines.
Amid widespread anger at the Israeli action, the U.N. Security Council called for an impartial investigation of the deaths, and the Turkish prime minister demanded the immediate lifting of Israel’s “inhumane” blockade of the Gaza Strip.
A spokesman for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said later that all activists “would be deported immediately,” and Israeli officials said they hoped to complete the operation in 48 hours.
The 700 activists detained when Israeli marines halted the six-ship convoy heading for the blockaded Palestinian enclave included Turks, Arabs, Americans, Asians and Europeans, among them two politicians and Swedish author Henning Mankell.
In Turkey, a visibly angry Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan told parliamentary deputies: “Israel’s behaviour should definitely, definitely be punished.”
“The time has come for the international community to say ‘enough’,” said Erdogan, who demanded the immediate lifting of “the inhumane embargo on Gaza.”
Erdogan’s Islamist views and overtures to Iran and Israeli enemies are blamed by many in Israel for souring ties between the Jewish state and Turkey, once its closest Muslim ally.
The bloodshed also put Netanyahu’s tense ties with U.S. President Barack Obama under further strain. Netanyahu cancelled talks with Obama to fly home from Canada to handle the crisis.
Obama, who has revived Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations through U.S.-mediated indirect talks, said he wanted the full facts soon.
Obama’s condolences
In a telephone call with Erdogan, Obama expressed his condolences for those killed in the raid, four of them Turks, and reiterated U.S. support for an impartial investigation “of the facts surrounding this tragedy,” the White House said.
He said it was important to find “better ways to provide humanitarian assistance to the people of Gaza without undermining Israel’s security,” the White House statement added.
“I think the situation from our perspective is very difficult and requires careful, thoughtful responses from all concerned,” U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told reporters in Washington.
The United Nations called for an impartial investigation of the deaths of the nine people, four of them Turks.
The Israeli military said the deaths occurred when commandos stormed the Mavi Marmara, the cruise ship on which most of the violence occurred, from helicopters and dinghies and opened fire in what Netanyahu said was self-defence.