Home Urgent Action Viva Palestina Wins Airport Battle! But Solidarity Needed
Viva Palestina Wins Airport Battle! But Solidarity Needed Print E-mail
Urgent Action
Tuesday, 05 January 2010 11:26
The latest alerts from the Viva Palestina convoy.


VIVA PALESTINA WIN AIRPORT BATTLE!

My last message to all of you was that the Viva Palestina convoy members have arrived into Al-Arish and were just hours away from breaking the siege of Gaza.

Now, I report to you that in the past hour 157 Viva Palestina convoy members passports were taken away at Al-Arish airport by the Egyptian authorities. The Egyptians also removed the passport's of British MP George Galloway and convoy leader Kevin Ovenden.

All passports were stamped in on entry but also received an exit stamp too. The Egyptian's wanted 157 convoy members to drive tonight to Gaza and forget about the other 400 Viva Palestina volunteers that were yet to fly into Al-Arish tonight.
Egyptian authorities say that the 400 volunteers would not be allowed entry! Convoy members started a sit down riot and refused to move or leave without their fellow convoy Brothers and Sisters!

I am now pleased to say that all passports have been returned back to their rightful owners and exit stamps have been removed - We won that battle! - Now convoy members are scouting for hotels for tonight and will return tomorrow to be reunited with all convoy members, before moving on, to pick up their vehicles and head for their final destination, Gaza! Well as you can see, the situation is changing by the hour and I am now calling for all of you to gather at Egyptian Embassies, consulates and interests tomorrow. It will be either to shame the Egyptian government for blocking the convoy further or to celebrate Viva Palestina entering Gaza and organising further solidarity.

Viva Palestina convoy will fight all the way to deliver the aid to Gaza!


GAZA ACTIVISTS IN EGYPT PASSPORT PROTEST  Monday 4th January at 11.45pm

By Tim Moynihan, Press Association

Humanitarian activists trying to take aid to Gaza staged noisy protests after Egyptian officials took away their passports and there was a lengthy delay in giving them back.

Yesterday’s demonstrations came after the first group of 157, including the Respect MP George Galloway, arrived at El-Arish airport in Egypt on a flight from Syria, waiting to be united with the aid, which has travelled to the same destination by sea.

One of the those travelling, Alexandra Lort-Phillips, 37, who works for Enfield Youth Offending Service in north London, said: “We arrived six or seven hours ago, in the early evening, and had to pay 15 dollars for entry visas.

“Our passports were taken from us and we became aware they were putting exit stamps in them which meant they intended to escort us out of the country on the way to Gaza.

“Protests started off with a peaceful sit-down, but then got noisier as people got more frustrated, and there was some shouting and singing and banging equipment in the airport arrivals lounge, but nothing was thrown around, there was no violence.

“We’ve just heard that the exit stamps will be taken out of the passports so it seems that the situation is being resolved.”

Alice Howard, a spokeswoman for the British-based Viva Palestina convoy, said: “I have spoken to organiser Kevin Ovenden, and he says it’s calming down now, they are giving back the passports, and they are going to be scouting for hotels tonight.

“They plan to all go together to the seaport tomorrow to take their vehicles off the ship, then travel to the Rafah crossing into Gaza.”

The 150-vehicle convoy is carrying  hundreds of tons of humanitarian supplies. There are 528 activists from 17 countries who plan to accompany the aid to Gaza.

End

---------------------
Alice Howard
Viva Palestina UK - Administration Manager
Tel: 07944 512 469
Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Website: http://www.vivapalestina.org/



Viva Palestina mission to Gaza

Eric Ruder reports on calls for solidarity from activists on a mission to bring badly needed supplies to the Palestinians of Gaza.

January 5, 2010

THE VIVA Palestina convoy to deliver humanitarian relief supplies to the besieged people of Gaza is calling on solidarity activists everywhere to call, e-mail and fax officials of the Egyptian government and gather outside consulates and embassies around the world as the convoy embarks on the last leg of its attempt to cross from Egypt into Gaza.

The situation is changing by the hour, so Viva Palestina organizers are asking that activists be prepared to either demand that Egyptian authorities allow the convoy to cross into Gaza or to celebrate the successful and safe passage of humanitarian relief supplies that are urgently needed by 1.5 million Palestinians living under Israel's blockade in Gaza.

As Viva Palestina organizer Kevin Ovenden via telephone from El Arish, Egypt, near the Rafah border cross into Gaza:

This has been a hectic journey that is now in its final stages. The convoy has played a significant role in highlighting the ongoing siege of the Palestinian people of Gaza. As the world's attention is drawn to the Gaza Strip, we wanted Israel to be the focus of people's outrage at the humanitarian disaster one year after Israel's punishing onslaught that began on December 27, 2008. Unfortunately, the government of Egypt has made itself the bogeyman in this situation.

Be that as it may, we are being inundated with support from around the world from people who can now see who it is that bears responsibility for this siege. In the end, this has inspired more people to join the growing movement in solidarity with the Palestinian people.


What you can do.

Internationally

Phone/fax/email your local Egyptian Embassy to demand that the convoy be allowed to proceed into Egypt.

In the UK:
The Egyptian Consulate in London can be contacted in the following ways:
Tel: 020 7235 9777
Fax: 020 7235 5684
E-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

In the US:

E-mail This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , call 202-895-5400 and fax 202-244-4319 to reach the Egyptian Embassy in Washington, D.C., and demand that Egypt allow for the safe and speedy passage of the Viva Palestina convoy.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

THE VIVA Palestina convoy set off from London with hundreds of participants and vehicles on December 6 and drove all the way through Europe, Turkey, Syria and Jordan before being told by Egyptian officials that they would not be allowed to cross into Egypt at the Aqaba, Jordan, crossing.

Instead, officials told them, they would only be allowed to enter Egypt at the El Arish port on the Mediterranean Sea. It seems likely that Egyptian officials didn't figure that Viva Palestina convoy participants would have the determination to take them up on this offer, but that's exactly what the activists did--first driving back to the Syrian port of Latakia, and then chartering a car ferry for their vehicles and planes for the people.

By Monday, January 4, one-quarter of the 518-person convoy had landed in El Arish, and the rest awaited flights from Syria. It seemed as if everything was proceeding according to plan. Then Egyptian officials put up a new set of obstacles.

First, they said that of the 198 vehicles that were part of the convoy, 60 would not be allowed to enter. Further, Egyptian officials demanded a $27,000 fee for using the El Arish port to offload the vehicles--a charge that was only incurred because Egyptian officials had denied them use of the Aqaba crossing.

But a representative of the governor of Sinai and El Arish appeared and reassured Viva organizers that these issues could be resolved, and the convoy would be able to head out in the next day with its vehicles.

A few hours later, Egyptian officials introduced a new wrinkle. While the bulk of the convoy was still awaiting flights to El Arish from Syria, Egyptian officials collected the passports of those in El Arish, marked them with an "exit from Egypt" stamp, and tried to get this lead group to immediately board vehicles and drive into Gaza, telling them they would receive their passports again as they made the crossing.

This proposal was rejected by the Viva Palestina convoy participants. They instead demanded that their passports be returned, and they be allowed to check into a hotel in order wait for the rest of the convoy to arrive, so they all could depart the next day. The Egyptian authorities refused, and the group began a spirited sit-down protest in the El Arish airport, banging pans and chanting.

Just as before, the Egyptian officials relented, saying that the Viva participants in El Arish would be allowed to wait for the arrival of the others before leaving for Gaza.

It is apparent that Egyptian authorities are looking for a way to divide, demoralize and frustrate the convoy--just as they did with the 1,400 international activists who made their way to Cairo in the hopes of crossing into Gaza for the Gaza Freedom March on December 31.

That's why it's essential for activists to be prepared to step up the pressure in order to insure that Egypt not be allowed to deny urgently needed supplies to the people of Gaza. "With the situation backwards and forwards by the hour, we are calling on all friends of Palestine to make their voices heard to the Egyptian government, in person where possible, but by e-mail, phone, fax and any other means available," said Ovenden.



Last Updated on Tuesday, 05 January 2010 12:19
 
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