Thursday, 20 May 2010

FREEMAN CENTER BROADCAST- May 20, 2010
For Zion's sake will I not hold my peace
and for Jerusalem's sake I will not rest." Isaiah 62.
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FREEMAN CENTER FOR STRATEGIC STUDIES
P.O. Box 35661 * Houston, Texas 77235-5661
Phone or Fax: 713-723-6016 * E-mail: bernards@sbcglobal.net
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They deem him their worst enemy who tells them the truth. - Plato
"The hardest thing to explain is the glaringly evident which everybody had decided not to see." -- Ayn Rand
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Ignorance Is Weakness - Know The Truth
Self-Inflicted Ignorance Is Suicide
The Freeman Center Is A Defense Against Ignorance
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SHABBAT SHALOM!
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Israel prepares for protest flotilla
By YAAKOV KATZ 
The Jerusalem Post 20/05/2010 02:30


9 ships plan to break the Gaza Strip blockade next week.


The IDF is gearing up to stop a flotilla of aid ships that is directed at 
breaking the blockade on the Gaza Strip next week.

Two ships, one named for international activist Rachel Corrie who was killed 
in Gaza in 2003, sailed from Ireland to Cyprus where they will join another 
seven boats scheduled to set sail for Gaza next Thursday.

The ships will carry hundreds of international peace activists as well as 
some 10,000 tons of construction material, medical equipment and school 
supplies. While the Free Gaza movement claims that the flotilla is needed to 
provide Palestinians in Gaza with basic supplies, the IDF pointed out on 
Tuesday that it had, in the past week, allowed over 14,000 tons of supplies 
into the Gaza Strip.

On Monday night, Foreign Ministry officials met with ambassadors from 
Turkey, Greece, Ireland and Sweden and informed them that the ships would be 
stopped on their way to the Gaza Strip. Defense Minister Ehud Barak has 
instructed the Navy to prepare for the operation, which due to the large 
number of vessels will require the participation of a large naval force.

The Israeli Navy has in the past stopped international aid ships from 
reaching the Gaza Strip. Last June, a ship from Cyprus that included a Nobel 
laureate among its passengers, was stopped en route to Gaza and towed to the 
Ashdod port.

Meanwhile Wednesday, Hamas sped up work it is doing on the Gaza port to 
expand it ahead of the flotilla’s arrival.

The project is funded by a Turkish NGO, and according to a report by the 
Quartet, work is carried out daily by 40 workers who put in 18-hour days. 
The first phase of the expansion is slated to be completed by the arrival of 
the ships and includes increasing the depth of the port basin to 8 meters.

The second phase of the project is expected to be completed in two months 
and includes increasing the depth of the entire port. The third phase will 
be aimed at turning the Gaza sea port into a tourist attraction for local 
residents. According to the Quartet report, most of the raw materials for 
the expansion work comes from recycled rubble of buildings destroyed in the 
Gaza Strip.