Israeli media outlets have reported that the navy may sink boats in a flotilla that is attempting to break a years-long naval blockade of Gaza and reach the coast of the embattled Strip.
The Global Sumud Flotilla entered the final stretch of its journey on Wednesday, passing into waters in which Israel enforces a blockade it announced in 2009 and that has come under renewed international scrutiny since the flow of goods into Gaza by land has reduced and famine declared in the strip last month.
“Interception is expected at any moment. We have entered into the danger zone,” flotilla organiser Hazami Barmada said on Wednesday. “Normally the Israeli [government] tend to do that during the night so to be honest this night will be critical.”
Without interception, the flotilla would be due to arrive on the shores of Gaza on Thursday morning at about 10am local time.
Military sources told the state-owned television station Kan that the navy is preparing to seize control of the flotilla ships and transfer those on board to a large military vessel. The navy expects that some boats “may be sunk at sea”, both Kan and the Times of Israel newspaper reported.
The marine commando unit Shayetet 13, which specialises in boarding vessels and has stopped previous flotillas, is set to be deployed and the boats will be towed to the port of Ashdod, according to the reports.
A mix of activists, lawyers, politicians and journalists are on board the 41-boat flotilla, which is carrying supplies of humanitarian aid that organisers hope to pass on to hospitals and charities operating within Gaza.
They have performed repeated drills to prepare for the possibility of being forcibly boarded by Israeli troops, and have been instructed to hold their hands up at all times to show they are not a threat.
Passengers on in the flotilla said one of their lead ships had been “aggressively circled” several times by an Israeli warship in the early hours of Wednesday, and that their on board communications had been cut.
“It came really close, and then they were circling. They jammed our communications, we didn’t have internet or cameras any more,” Lisi Proenca said in a video call from Sirius, a boat in the flotilla. “We were scared, you could feel the tension in everybody.”
The Israel Defense Forces did not respond to a request for comment, but has said it intends to prevent the boats from landing in Gaza.
The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territories Francesca Albanese said that Israel’s assertion that the flotilla is a security risk to Israel because it is entering a combat zone was “nonsense” and that these were “Palestine’s waters”.
“Gaza waters are not under the legitimate authority of Israel. Full stop,” Albanese said. “Any intervention in these waters would be unlawful.”