Israel's flotilla attack came in three phases

There were absolutely no weapons aboard the Mavi Marmara as Israel claims, says Gulf News reporter Abbas Al Lawati, who witnessed the carnage on the aid ship to Gaza

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Reuters
Reuters

Amman: A red laser dot appeared on his head, and seconds later he was shot dead. A member of the organisers rushed to his aid, only to have the man's brains spill out onto his hands.

This was the first death in the deadly attack on the Mavi Marmara — lead ship in the Freedom Flotilla carrying 700 aid workers, journalists and diplomats.

Israeli forces first attacked the ship 74 nautical miles from Gaza — six miles from the extended Israeli zone.

Israeli troops attacked the boat in three stages. The first attack came during dawn prayers when smoke bombs were thrown on deck. These were thrown overboard by the defence teams on board the ship.

The Mavi Marmara tried to alter its course so that any further attack would occur during daylight, but the Israelis persisted and boarded the ship. They used paintball guns on passengers — the ammunition mixed with glass.

Israeli troops tried to board the ship from speedboats and the defence teams used hose pipes to prevent soldiers from boarding the vessel.

Makeshift weapons were fashioned from items lying on the deck, but there were absolutely no weapons on board the ship, as Israel claims. As chaos and panic swept the boat the Israelis began stage two, using rubber bullets. Once blood started flowing, anger mounted against the Israelis.

In the third attack, the injuries turned to deaths. Four people were killed instantly while 12 others bled to death. Finally, the captain surrendered and agreed to take the Mavi Marmara to the Israeli port city of Ashdod after an Israeli soldier pointed a gun at a one-year-old Turkish child.

— Abbas Al Lawati has been freed. He left Amman, Jordan, for Muscat, Oman, and was scheduled to arrive late last night.

Sondos Al Abed Al Jaber, one of the 16 Kuwaiti activists who were on board the Freedom Flotilla, is greeted on her arrivalat Kuwait International Airport yesterday. The activists were received by Kuwaiti officials and hundreds of relatives.
Activists arrested during a raid on an aid convoy sailing to Gaza, gesture as they arrive in Jordan, after crossing the Allenby Bridge crossing point between Israel and Jordan on June 2, 2010.
A Jordanian activist, kisses his son after he crosses the Israeli controlled, Allenby Bridge which links Jordan with the West Bank, in Shouneh, west of Amman, Jordan on Wednesday, June 2, 2010.
The hands of a detained activist from the Gaza-bound flotilla are placed on a bus window as it leaves a prison in Beersheba, southern Israel, on the way to Israel's airport, Wednesday, June 2, 2010. Israel on Wednesday quickened its expulsion of detained activists from a Gaza-bound flotilla as the diplomatic fallout from its deadly raid on the ships widened.
Activists, seized during a raid on an aid convoy sailing to Gaza, bid farewell to one another before leaving the Jordanian border, as they cross the Allenby Bridge crossing point between Israel and Jordan.

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