Jewish Tech
1.3K posts

Jewish Tech
@c0xl_
| Code | Shell | *.onion | OSINT | ✡️
Bern Katılım Ağustos 2021
1.4K Takip Edilen1K Takipçiler

@goldi Warum veranstalten sie eine Demo in Deutschland und helfen nicht den Menschen vor Ort?
Deutsch

Keine Ahnung wie viele Tausend. Aber mit Sicherheit eine der größten Palästina-Demos, die es bisher in Deutschland gab. #b2106 #United4Gaza
Deutsch

@khamenei_ir Wait until the Israeli flag is everywhere and Iran is renamed Israel 2.0.
English

@aya_velazquez Was würdest du machen, wenn ein anderes Land droht, dich und deine Religion auszulöschen? Immer dieser Antisemitismus.
Deutsch

@JustLuai You're better than every person in America and Europe with this "Free Palestine" stuff.
English

How many have you killed? How many innocent Palestinians have you jailed, and are raping and torturing them? You want a war with Iran and you will do anything to make it happen, including allowing the Oct 7 attack on your people. You start a war with Iran, don’t count on the U.S. to join you. We Do Not Consent!
English

After threats, lies, and disruption, they turned to cold-blooded murder:
Last night Hamas brutally killed at least 5 Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) aid workers, en route to a distribution center to deliver today’s essential aid.
They showed no mercy.
Hamas is weaponizing suffering in Gaza - denying food, targeting lifesavers, and forsaking its own people.
📍Where is the @UN condemnation? Secretary General @antonioguterres, your silence is shameful!
🔗 cnn.com/2025/06/11/mid…

English

@HamasAtrocities I don't like Greta, and I'm pro-Israel, but under the law, it can be considered “kidnapping”.
English

From a moral and civil rights standpoint: Yes, Greta and the other passengers were "kidnapped." But the issue is more complicated than rubber-stamping it.
She was forcibly detained in international waters without violence or provocation, which many would reasonably interpret as kidnapping or illegal abduction.
From a strictly legal standpoint, "kidnapping" is arguable, but not definitively false. It hinges on the contested legality of the blockade and whether Israel had a recognized legal basis to detain peaceful civilians so far from its shores.
Under international maritime law, detaining boat passengers in international waters (i.e., beyond 12 nautical miles from a nation’s coastline) is highly restricted, but with some exceptions:
General Rule (UNCLOS):
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) governs this. A ship sailing under the flag of a sovereign state (e.g., the UK) on the high seas is under the exclusive jurisdiction of its flag state.
So by default, authorities (like Israel’s navy) cannot legally detain or board such a vessel in international waters unless:
Exceptions That Allow Interdiction:
Piracy
Slave trade
Unauthorized broadcasting
Stateless vessels
Self-defense or imminent threat
UN Security Council resolution permitting action
Flag state consent (e.g., UK allowing Israel to board)
Violation of a declared military blockade (if recognized under international law).
If the vessel was outside Israeli territorial waters and posed no imminent security threat, intercepting it without consent is widely seen as illegal under UNCLOS.
Israel did not have clear-cut jurisdiction over the flotilla in international waters, but it claims limited authority under naval blockade enforcement, which is legally controversial.
English






















