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A pro-Palestinian ship named Marianne is escorted to Ashdod port in southern Israel after it was seized by Israeli navy at the Mediterranean sea, Israel June 29, 2015. Israel said on Monday it had blocked a boat leading a four-vessel protest flotilla of foreign activists from reaching the Gaza Strip and forced the vessel to sail to the Israeli port. Image Credit: REUTERS

Occupied Jerusalem: Israel deported Tunisian ex-president Munsif Al Marzouqi and European parliament member Ana Miranda on Tuesday after they took part in a flotilla seeking to defy its Gaza blockade, an official said.

“The [former] president of Tunisia and the Spanish lawmaker flew this morning. There are another 14 who have begun the expulsion process,” a spokeswoman for the regime’s immigration authority said.

Israel had on Monday commandeered the Swedish-flagged Marianne of Gothenburg, part of the Freedom Flotilla III, and accompanied it to the port of Ashdod.

Sixteen foreign nationals were on-board along with two Israelis, Basel Ghattas, a Palestinian MP with the Joint Arab List and a television reporter. The two Israelis have been released, though Ghattas could face a parliamentary hearing on whether he should face sanctions.

The Marianne was part of a four-boat flotilla of pro-Palestinian activists who had been seeking to reach the Gaza Strip to highlight the Israeli blockade of the territory that they called inhumane and illegal.

The three other boats had turned back before the Marianne was boarded by the Israeli navy in an operation that took place without the deadly force that marred a raid to stop a similar bid in 2010.

Speaking after being released from brief police custody Monday night, Ghattas condemned Israel’s “illegal” commandeering of the ship, which took place in international waters.

“In the end, we see the Freedom Flotilla III achieved its main goal — to draw local and global attention to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, which is a result of Israel’s siege of the Strip,” he said.

Ghattas said he believed the attempt and Israeli operation to stop it would spur “activists from around the world to bring flotilla after flotilla, until the blockade on Gaza is removed.”

The activists’ campaign came as Israel faced heavy international pressure over its actions in Gaza, with a UN report last week saying both the Israeli regime and Palestinian fighters may have committed war crimes during a 50-day conflict in the besieged coastal enclave last summer.

Israel says the blockade is necessary to stop weapons from arriving in the Gaza Strip by sea.

The reconstruction of thousands of homes destroyed during the fighting between Israel and Hamas, Gaza’s Islamist de facto rulers, is yet to begin, and both Israel’s blockade and a lack of support from international donors have been blamed.

In 2010, ten Turkish activists aboard the Mavi Marmara were killed in an Israeli raid on a six-ship flotilla.