Greta Thunberg among Gaza flotilla detainees to leave Israel

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Athena – Swedish activist Greta Tunberg will be among more than 70 people of various nationalities to leave Israel on Monday after they were captured on board the Flotilla in Gaza.

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The majority, if not all, those who are exempted from the Israeli detention, will be delivered to Greece, where they will be able to make flights to their countries, their governments said on Sunday.

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Those who fly from Israel on Monday include 28 French citizens, 27 Greeks, 15 Italians and nine Swedes.

Twenty -one Spaniards returned separately to Spain on Sunday from Israel.

The release is still leaving several foreigners in custody of the Israeli language, including 28 citizens of Spain.

All of them were aboard the global flotilla with 45 sums carrying activists and politicians who sought to pass by the Israeli blockade to provide assistance in a newspaper where the United Nations states that hunger has taken possession of.

Israel began to intercept ships in international waters on Wednesday. The Israeli official said on Thursday that boats with more than 400 people on board were obsessed with Palestinian territory.

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Italian and Greek foreign ministries said their liberated citizens will be flying from Israel to Athens on Monday. Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani stated that the 15 Italians will have assistance in the subsequent transfer to Italy.

The Foreign Ministry of France said that 28 French citizens will be delivered to Greece. They fell on most of 30 French citizens, which Israel captured on flotillas.

The Swedish Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not say where the Swedes would fly, but the Swedish media said that they could also be sent in flight to Greece.

'Turn to the monkeys'

The first group of 26 Italians had already left Israel on Saturday. But the last 15 were supposed to wait for their judicial exile from the country when they refused to sign a form that allows their voluntary liberation.

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Some of the Italians in the first group said after returning to their country that the Israeli authorities were subjected to a deterioration in treatment.

Savero Tomsashi, journalist of the fan page of the site online, said that his Israeli abductors hit him from behind.

“We were treated as old monkeys in the worst circuses of the 1920s,” said Tommashi, quoted by Ansa Press.

Sweden Foreign Minister Maria Malmer Stengard told AFP that the embassy employees in Tel Aviv were able to visit nine Swedes in the detention.

“Late Sunday, the Israeli authorities informed us that they should authorize Swedish citizens to leave Israel (Monday) tomorrow by plane,” she said.

One of the Spaniards who returned home on Sunday, Rafael Borrego told reporters that those who were detained by Israel suffered “repeated physical and mental abuse”, including blows and forced to Earth.

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