[ad_1]
A Palestinian flag flutters on a boat at a rally before the 4th anniversary of the Mavi Marmara flotilla incident in Gaza, at the port of Gaza on May 29, 2014.
(Photo credit: REUTERS / SALAM MOHAMMED)
Dear reader,
As you can imagine, more people are reading the Jerusalem Post than ever before.
Nevertheless, traditional business models are no longer sustainable and quality publications,
like ours, we are forced to look for new ways to continue. Unlike many other news organizations,
we have not set up firewalls. We want to keep our journalism open
and accessible and be able to continue to provide you with news
and badyzes on the front lines of Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world.
As one of our faithful readers, we ask you to be our partner.
For $ 5 a month you will have access to the following:
- A user experience almost completely free of ads
- Access to our Premium Section and our monthly magazine to learn Hebrew , Ivrit
- Contents of the Repor the Repored Jerusalem
- A brand new ePaper with the daily as it appears in Israel
Help us grow and continue to tell Israel history to the world.
Thank you,
Ronit Hasin-Hochman, CEO, Jerusalem Post Group
Yaakov Katz, Editor-in-Chief
ENHANCE YOUR JPOST EXPERIENCE FOR $ 5 PER MONTH
Show me later
Stop showing it
A group of militants in Gaza is trying to set a course Tuesday, July 9 to "break the siege" of Gaza, they said Monday. The activists decided that their navigation would take place after months of the "Great March of Return" that failed and caused many injuries as Hamas sought to break through the security fence around Gaza.
The National Organizing Committee of the Great Return March affirmed that a group of small boats with patients and wounded would seek to leave Gaza en route to Cyprus. According to The New Arab, Salah Abdul Atti, an organizer, called on the UN to protect the group of boats. A similar attempt was made at the end of May and intercepted by the navy.
Bbadam Manasra, a spokesman for the National Committee to break the siege, told Anadolu, a Turkish media, that "the flotilla will leave at 11 am At the same time, an" Freedom Flotilla Coalition "is trying to to sail another ship called Al-Awda in Gaza which has traveled thousands of kilometers from Scandinavian ports and was near Corsica July 8.
In May 2010, a large Gaza flotilla of six ships was intercepted and nine militants killed in clashes.In 2011, a new flotilla stalled after one of the ships mysteriously suffered from mechanical problems in Greece.Since then, the phenomenon of the fleets has been interrupted.
Israel maintains a security cordon around Gaza in which Palestinian fishermen are allowed to fish within 9 nautical miles of the coast.Outside the area, ships are intercepted by the Navy.It is rare that the Palestinians have sought to break through this area, which they see as a blockade, and to leave Gaza.
[ad_2]
Source link