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US launches ‘wave of strikes’ on Iran after Trump tells Iran that power plants, bridges will be targeted if no deal is made – Middle East crisis live

The US ⁠military ⁠has denied that its ⁠forces struck a ⁠civilian wheat ‌storage facility ‌in Iran ‌on Tuesday. It said that Iranian military ‌targets were struck to degrade Tehran’s ability ⁠to attack commercial shipping in the strait of ‌Hormuz. Iran has threatened to halt all energy exports from the Middle East after the US reimposed a blockade of its ports and ships, as the two countries traded strikes for a fifth day and Donald Trump threatened to expand US strikes on Iran next week. The US blockade came into force early on Wednesday, prompting Iran to shut the strait of Hormuz and carry out a wave of retaliatory airstrikes on countries hosting US bases in the region. The US military said it has launched a new wave of strikes against Iran as the warring countries continue their back-and-forth attacks in the Middle East. US Central Command (Centcom) issued a statement today announcing the strikes that took place during daylight hours. In its attacks over recent days, the US has struck Iran only at night. Centcom said the strikes were “designed to further degrade military capabilities Iranian forces have used to attack commercial shipping in the strait of Hormuz”. The Iranian army vowed a “decisive response” after seven personnel were reported killed in a US attack on an Iranian military base. Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency reported a number of personnel were also wounded in the incident at the base in Bampur in south-eastern Iran. More than 30 people have been killed in southern Iran in US attacks in recent days, said government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani. Iran’s health ministry said more than 260 people have been injured across the country in the latest wave of US strikes. Israeli airstrikes have killed at least a dozen people in Gaza over the past two days, local health officials said Wednesday, as strikes continue almost daily despite a months-old ceasefire with Hamas. On Wednesday, three members of a family were killed in central Gaza, Al Aqsa Hospital officials said. Iran’s foreign ⁠minister, Abbas Araghchi, travelled to Doha on ⁠Wednesday ⁠to attend the funeral of former Qatari emir ⁠Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani, Iran’s ISNA ⁠reported, days after Iran attacked ‌Qatar. Iran ‌has attacked what it ‌says are US targets in Qatar – a mediator between Washington and Tehran in the ‌Iran war – most recently on Sunday when the death of the former emir was announced. Lebanon and Israel concluded US-brokered talks in Rome on Wednesday, with a US official saying ⁠they had made progress on implementing a plan that could see Israeli forces begin to withdraw from some parts ⁠of southern Lebanon within ⁠days. The two longtime foes held ambassador-level talks at the US embassy in Rome on Tuesday and Wednesday - their sixth round of face-to-face ⁠negotiations since a new war erupted on 2 March between Israel and Lebanese armed group Hezbollah, triggered by the wider regional ⁠conflict. Sirens rang out in Bahrain, while Kuwait and Jordan reported intercepting drones and missiles fired from Iran. The Iranian state news agency IRNA reported that Tehran forces launched a drone attack on a military base in Jordan that hosts US warplanes, while the IRGC claimed to have hit American facilities in Bahrain and Kuwait. US strikes targeted Iran’s southern port city of Bushehr, home to the country’s only civilian nuclear plant, according to state media. It was the second day in a row that the city has come under attack, according to IRNA.

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Wildfires in Ontario make Toronto air quality worst in world

Smoke from more than 100 active wildfires in northern Ontario have made Toronto’s air quality the current worst in the world and caused yellow, smoky air in cities across the north-east US. Environment Canada issued health warnings on Wednesday after the sky over country’s largest city turned a sickly yellow and was ranked the worst in the world according to IQAir, the Swiss technology company that racks global air quality. The city is also suffering a heatwave that shattered a three-decade record after reaching 37.3C in the downtown core, with runways at its main international airport hitting 55C. The wildfires burning across northwestern Ontario have prompted mandatory evacuations from a number of First Nations communities. Striking video footage of a train near the community of Armstrong, Ontario, highlighted the speed and ferocity of the fires. “This could potentially overtake us here … This has gotten a little scary,” says a crew member as a wall of flames whips across the windows. “We’re encased in flames now.” The railway company Canadian National confirmed the crew had been “safely evacuated” from the area. Other images showed families fleeing their homes by boat against the backdrop of massive plumes of smoke. “My family hometown, Collins Ontario, is GONE,” Nadya Kwandibens, a photographer, posted on social media. Residents of Namaygoosisagagun First Nation said they had only minutes warning before fleeing across Collins Lake in the northwest part of the province. “What we are witnessing right now is devastating,” said Sol Mamakwa, a member of the province’s New Democratic party. “An entire First Nation community has been erased because of this disaster. With wildfires closing highways and threatening communities across the north, we urge everyone to follow the guidance of emergency officials and remain prepared in case evacuations are necessary. “Collins has burned to the ground. This is a tragedy and we are grateful that everyone got out safely,” said Lise Vaugeois, the provincial representative for the region. “Fires are part of a natural cycle, but the extreme temperatures we are experiencing across the county and the growing severity of weather events are indicators of climate change.” CNN reported that air quality alerts due to spoke have been issued across large parts of Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin, and that thicker smoke is forecast to move over New York, Washington and other cities across the eastern seaboard later in the week.

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Moscow warns that foreign troops in Ukraine would be seen as legitimate targets – as it happened

… and on that note, it’s a wrap for today! Lithuanian (10:06) and Latvian (13:07) presidents warned that they were picking up intelligence that Russia could be looking to conduct targeted strikes or acts of sabotage against critical infrastructure on Nato’s eastern flank. Russia dismissed the warnings as “scare stories” (11:59), but separately warned that any foreign troops that could be deployed to Ukraine as part of a peace deal would be seen by it as “legitimate targets” (15:52). The exchange comes as the EU and Ukraine agreed on a new defence partnership, including a drone deal (12:52, 16:54), and EU ministers continued talks on the 21st package of sanctions against Russia (11:36). European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen received the inaugural Ukrainian Order of Europe in Kyiv, with Zelenskyy thanking her for support for Kyiv’s ambitions to join the EU (12:43). The Ukrainian president also appeared to endorse the head of the state energy company Naftogaz Sergii Koretsky to be Ukraine’s next prime minister, after Yulia Svyrydenko’s resignation earlier this week (16:25). Meanwhile, German chancellor Friedrich Merz defended his proposal for an associate EU membership for Ukraine, warning the bloc could lose its credibility if it didn’t move quickly enough to accept new members (14:46). Speaking at his annual summer press conference, Merz also defended his government’s track record on both domestic and foreign policy, playing down the prospect of the far-right Alternative für Deutschland winning in the upcoming regional elections (14:01). Merz also warned the US against using its proposed grant programmes to support far-right movements in Germany, saying “we do not interfere in American elections” (14:53). And, finally, Hungary’s former foreign minister Péter Szijjártó, a close Viktor Orbán associate who faced criticism over his ties with Moscow, has stepped down as an MP to take a senior executive role at the Chinese carmaker BYD (15:20), prompting mockery and criticism from the country’s new prime minister, Péter Magyar (16:08). If you have any tips, comments or suggestions, email me at jakub.krupa@theguardian.com. I am also on Bluesky at @jakubkrupa.bsky.social and on X at @jakubkrupa.

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Berlin man charged with 22 counts of raping unconscious women and filming the assaults

A Berlin man has been charged with nearly two dozen counts of raping unconscious women and filming the acts, while investigators believe based on video evidence that the suspect may have attacked up to 60 victims. In the latest of a series of high-profile cases involving the serial rape of unwitting targets on camera, Berlin prosecutors said they have indicted the 68-year-old German national on 22 counts of sexual assault of 14 women. The man, an electrician, has been in police custody since March. Because the suspect, who has not been named, is believed to have recorded each of the rapes “all the offences are alleged to have been committed in conjunction with an infringement of the right to one’s own image”, the Berlin public prosecutor’s office said in a statement. The ongoing investigation “revealed numerous alleged offences committed against a total of 58 women”, they said, adding that 10 of the women have not yet been identified. “The accused is alleged to have sedated the women using various sleeping tablets in combination with alcohol and subsequently raped them,” prosecutors said, adding that the suspect lured the women beforehand on online dating platforms. Those believed to have been attacked who have already spoken to investigators said they could not recall the alleged assaults and “only learned of them after the videos of the offences were discovered”. Prosecutors said the suspect had not yet responded to the charges against him. The cases came to light after a tip from police in another state, Lower Saxony, who in early 2025 were investigating similar allegations against a man who has since died. He is believed to have been in contact with the Berlin suspect through online chats. The tip prompted a search of the man’s flat in the Friedrichsfelde suburb of the German capital during which police unearthed a cache of digital files. In 2026, an investigator found several videos of sexual assaults in which the suspect is believed to be the assailant. Police raided his home again in March of this year and detained him. The allegations recall similar cases this year in Berlin and Munich involving the serial sexual assault of drugged women captured on camera. German media drew parallels to the case of French woman Gisèle Pelicot whose then husband was convicted of drugging and abusing her and offering her unconscious to dozens of strangers to be raped over nearly a decade, in a trial that made global headlines. “Pelicot is not an isolated case,” said judge Markus Koppenleitner in Munich in April when sentencing a student from China to 11 years’ imprisonment for repeatedly giving his girlfriend an anaesthetic, raping her and filming the acts. The convicted man is believed to be part of a ring of abusers in a Telegram group called “German Driving School”, which targeted women of Chinese heritage living in Europe. “This is not a Chinese or French phenomenon, but one that also occurs in Germany and, ultimately, worldwide,” Koppenleitner said. Investigators in the UK said this month they had uncovered a “truly international network” of organised drug-facilitated sexual attacks in which victims are sedated before being raped and sexually assaulted.

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As Russia’s assault continues, Ukraine’s politics shift and an old alliance begins to fray

I’ve just come back from a trip to Kyiv, where after more than four years of war, it can feel like the political and diplomatic news agenda has become cyclical: a suggestion that some kind of peace deal could be around the corner, followed by the swift intervention of reality that the Kremlin has no interest in abandoning its maximalist goals, and we all go back to the drawing board. We are now in a period where Russia has again stepped up its air attacks on the Ukrainian capital. Frequent mass drone and missile attacks keep Kyiv residents awake, and some even get through to the city centre, whereas in the past Ukrainian air defences were usually able to repel them. Nights can be noisy and scary: one attack while I was there killed 27 people. Thousands head into the metro to get some sleep. So what are the chances that Putin’s planned three-day war will finally come to an end in its fifth year? All of Donald Trump’s attempts to bring it to a close have failed, and these efforts have been somewhat muted over past months as Washington turned its attention to the Middle East. But the theme is again hanging in the air in Kyiv, and there is now cautious optimism in some quarters that late autumn this year might provide a possible window for some kind of a deal. Ukraine is keen to avoid another winter at war, and Vladimir Putin finds himself under pressure from Kyiv’s campaign of spectacular long-range drone strikes on Russia’s oil infrastructure. Others are more sceptical, pointing to Putin’s recent aggressive rhetoric and suggesting it’s much more likely that Moscow will double down than seek agreement. Domestically, political life is hotting up, with Volodymyr Zelenskyy about to reshuffle the government yet again, and rumours that he could seek a renewed mandate in a presidential election, which might swiftly follow some kind of ceasefire. As usual, when these discussions surface there are more questions than answers: even if there was a ceasefire, how would voting be organised for frontline communities, for Ukrainians living under Russian occupation and for the millions of refugees abroad? Who would stand against Zelenskyy, and is a real political contest possible in the circumstances? *** Tensions between allies If these debates are familiar to those who have been following the war in Ukraine, there is one new scandal that has erupted in recent weeks: the increasingly acrimonious nature of a falling out between Ukraine and Poland. Back in 2022, Warsaw was one of Kyiv’s most reliable allies but a dispute over history has brought the relationship to crisis point. It centres on Polish fury that Ukrainian authorities have decided to name a military unit after the “Heroes of the UPA” – the UPA being a wartime nationalist group, one branch of which was responsible for massacres of Poles and Jews durng the second world war. This has, unsurprisingly, been greeted with fury in Warsaw. It’s a fiendishly complicated story – as historical memory issues usually are – but I’ve tried to unpack it in this piece I reported from both Kyiv and Warsaw. It’s something I’d wanted to write for a while, but it’s one of those that can be very hard to get across all the nuance in. After all, the idea that Ukraine is full of fascism-loving neo-Nazis is a key trope of Kremlin propaganda. I wrote a whole book about historical memory in Ukraine and Russia back in 2018, and how selective or distorted narratives of the second world war informed modern-day events and bubbled under the surface during the annexation of Crimea in 2014 and then of Donbas. In the four years since Russia’s full-scale invasion, we’ve written countless stories about how Ukrainians are pushing back against Russia’s fake history, reclaiming their cultural heritage and building a new and consolidated national identity. But the tension with Poland introduces a more complicated element into Ukraine’s memory wars. Many people – not only Poles – take issue with veneration of the UPA. What has struck me from conversations in both Ukraine and Poland in recent weeks is the depth of animosity among ordinary people on both sides. Ukrainians rage that Poland is playing into Russian hands by fussing over history in a time of war; Poles say that after four years of supporting Ukraine with military and humanitarian aid, the least they could expect would be for their ally not to honour historical figures who massacred Poles. Bartosz Cichocki, Poland’s former ambassador to Ukraine, told me Poland may now get tougher on Ukraine’s path to joining the European Union. In short, there will be “no more romance, no more naivety”, in the Poland-Ukraine relationship, he said. As a general rule, it’s bad news when historical issues are in the hands of politicians rather than historians, and that is what has happened here. With elections due soon in Poland and (as discussed above) in Ukraine, potentially – expect things to get worse between Warsaw and Kyiv before they get better. To receive the complete version of This Is Europe in your inbox every Wednesday, please subscribe here.

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Iran threatens to halt all Middle East energy exports amid renewed US blockade

Iran threatened to halt all energy exports from the Middle East after the US reimposed a blockade of its ports and ships, as the two countries traded strikes for a fifth day and Donald Trump threatened to attack a site linked to Iran’s nuclear programme while he weighed further expanding US strikes next week. The US blockade came into force early on Wednesday, and was followed by a 90-minute wave of strikes against Iran’s coastal defence systems and missile sites, according to the US military. Iranian authorities said the previous day of US strikes had killed at least seven troops, and wounded more than 300 people – the highest casualty count of any recent round of violence between the two countries. At least 30 civilians have been killed by US strikes in southern Iran in recent days, according to the Iranian government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani. The strikes came as Trump suggested the US could widen attacks against Iran to force open the strait of Hormuz, with the US president warning that he would hit “Pickaxe Mountain” – a fortified underground facility linked to Iran’s disputed nuclear programme. “We’re going to take out Pickaxe Mountain. Tell the ⁠Iranians to be ready,” Trump said in an interview on the Hugh Hewitt Show. The facility was not hit in the last two wars. The US strikes and renewed blockade prompted Iran to shut the strait of Hormuz and carry out a wave of retaliatory airstrikes on countries hosting US bases in the region. “Regional energy exports are either shared by all or denied to all,” Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) declared in a statement on Wednesday. It added that the strait would remain closed until the “end of America’s evils”, further disrupting shipping in the waterway that before the war was a chokepoint for a fifth of the world’s oil and gas. Iran’s deputy foreign minister, Kazem Gharibabadi, said the renewed US blockade had “in a way, dismantled the Islamabad memorandum”, the interim deal that, among other things, was meant to keep the strait open and give space for negotiations towards a permanent peace. The flare-up in violence and disruption to shipping further drove up the price of oil, with the price of crude on Wednesday continuing to rise past the one-month high reached on Tuesday. Shipping companies were avoiding transiting the strait through a US military programme meant to keep commerce flowing, Reuters reported, after continued Iranian attacks prompted safety concerns. The US said Iran had attacked seven commercial ships in the strait last week, with almost a dozen crew members killed, missing or injured. Iran also launched airstrikes on Bahrain, Jordan and Kuwait, countries that host US forces. Jordan said it intercepted three ballistic missiles from Iran on Wednesday, while Kuwait said it was working to extinguish a fire caused by Iranian attacks. The US military said it targeted Iranian defence and missile sites on the Greater Tunb island in the strait of Hormuz, as well as the barracks for Iran’s mechanised brigade in Sistan and Balochistan province, Iranian state TV reported. Iran’s army vowed a “decisive response to this aggressive action by the American enemy”. The dispute over the strait threatened to pull the region back into a total war. “Next week it gets really bad for them because next week comes the power plants. Next week comes the bridges,” the US president said in a Fox News interview on Tuesday. “We’re going to knock out all their power plants. We’re going to knock out all their bridges unless they get to the table and negotiate.” Targeting civilian infrastructure without a clear military target could constitute a war crime. Axios, citing three sources, reported that Trump held a situation room meeting on Tuesday to discuss a massive offensive against Iran in order to force Tehran to reopen the strait. Trump said US negotiators had been in touch with their Iranian counterparts to tell them to make a deal, while saying the US would save energy targets for last but would ultimately hit them. Trump made similar comments in March, when he threatened to “obliterate” Iran’s power stations and fresh water plants if Tehran did not agree to peace terms “shortly”. Trump backtracked from a threat earlier this week that ships would have to pay a 20% fee to the US for “security” in the strait, replacing it with what he described as investment and trade deals with Gulf Arab states. The US president said he had decided to scrap the toll “based on highly productive conversations with Middle East leadership”, and touted “massive” investments, just five hours before the toll was due to come into effect. In Rome, Lebanon and Israel completed a new round of negotiations which was described as “positive” by the US. A US official said both sides had agreed to implement the “pilot zone” scheme, which would see Israeli troops withdraw from certain areas in south Lebanon and be replaced by the Lebanese army, which will be tasked with safeguarding the areas from Hezbollah. “Talks concluded after two days of productive and positive discussions,” a US official said in a statement. He added that the participants “agreed on the structure and guidelines for the pilot zone process, to be finalised and implemented in the coming days”. Israel occupies more than 600 sq km (230 sq miles) of land in south Lebanon, which it has labelled a “security zone” to protect residents of northern Israel. The Israeli military has destroyed dozens of villages in the areas it occupies, something Human Rights Watch said could amount to a war crime. The Lebanese delegation is seeking the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Lebanon, something unlikely to happen in the short term. Hezbollah, which is not a party to the talks, has made it clear that they view the dialogue process as illegitimate. With Agence France-Presse

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Meloni government vows to press on with electoral reform after losing key vote

Giorgia Meloni’s ruling coalition has pledged to persevere with its flagship plans to overhaul Italy’s electoral system after a parliamentary setback provoked calls for snap elections. In a secret ballot in the lower house on Tuesday, an amendment to a key aspect of the reforms was defeated by a single vote, with an estimated 20-25 members of the coalition breaking ranks. The rejected measure would have given voters more power to rank their preferred candidates on electoral lists, with the exception of lead candidates, who would remain at the top of each party’s list. With a general election due to be held next year, Meloni’s government intended the planned changes to increase its chances of winning a second term. Tuesday’s vote is the latest setback to its high-profile reform agenda, after a failed referendum on overhauling the judiciary in March. As the opposition claimed victory in the chamber of deputies, chanting “elections” and “resign”, an angry Meloni took to Facebook. “The swamp won again,” she wrote, calling the failed amendment “a missed opportunity for the Italian people”. She blamed the opposition for insisting on a secret ballot, while acknowledging that “several votes were also missing from the majority ranks, and that is something we need to reflect upon”. Opposition leaders seized on the rebellion as a sign that the prime minister was not in command of her own ship. Elly Schlein, the leader of the centre-left Democratic party (PD), said it was time for Meloni to “go home and give the country a government capable of solving Italy’s problems”. Giuseppe Conte, a former prime minister of Italy, called for Meloni to step down and for early elections. “It is necessary to take responsibility for one’s decisions,” he said. Matteo Renzi, another former prime minister, called for Meloni to resign in April. But Luca Ciriani, a senator and minister from Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party, told the Italian news channel SkyTG24: “We don’t intend to end our experience in government and we are proud of [the] stability we’ve given the country.” He said between 20 and 25 “sniper” lawmakers from within the rightwing coalition, which includes Forza Italia and the populist League, had voted against the amendment. Francesco Lollobrigida, another Brothers of Italy minister and a close ally of Meloni, vowed to “hunt” down the rebels. Other members of the ruling bloc pledged to push ahead with the electoral reforms, which seek to introduce a fully proportional model, including the creation of bonus seats for the coalition that wins the most votes, even if it falls short of the required majority. Enrico Costa, Forza Italia’s leader in the lower house, told the newspaper Corriere ‌della Sera: “It is crucial to go ahead with this law that guarantees stability.” The deputy prime minister, Forza’s Antonio Tajani, downplayed talk of a looming government collapse, describing the setback as “a blip along the way”. The president of the upper house, Brothers of Italy’s Ignazio La Russa, said the defeated measure could be revived there. Though Brothers of Italy maintains a lead in polls of voters’ preferred parties, polls of favoured coalitions tell a different story. There, Meloni’s bloc comes second to a leftwing alliance led by the PD. Meloni’s position could also be threatened by the emergence of a far-right rival, Roberto Vannacci, an MEP who broke away from the League to set up Futuro Nazionale. Surveys suggest general elections, which are due before October 2027, would produce no clear winner and a hung parliament.

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‘They want to break our will’: Gaza flotilla activist tells of rape in Israeli detention

The third time Anna Liedtke was subjected to an illegal strip-search in Israeli detention, female prison guards forced her on to her knees, covered her mouth to stop her screaming and raped her, according to interviews and a criminal complaint filed in Israel. She described hearing male guards laughing during the attack, which she believes they watched and may have filmed. It took place in an area separated from the prison hallway by a partially drawn curtain that her attackers had left open. Liedtke, 25, joined a flotilla sailing from Europe to Gaza with humanitarian aid last autumn. Israeli forces intercepted her boat in international waters on 8 October and took her to Israel, where she was detained for five days. The abuse and violence directed at flotilla participants in Israeli prisons, including rape, was intended to intimidate, Liedtke said. “It’s clear they want to break our will and silence us, making this so traumatic that we will never talk about Palestine again,” she told the Guardian. Instead, she told friends and doctors within days. In December she became the first flotilla activist to talk publicly about rape in Israeli detention. More than a dozen others have reported sexual assault, most anonymously. Now lawyers acting for Liedtke in Israel have filed a complaint demanding authorities investigate her allegations. Israeli law defines rape as all non-consensual penetration. “There is no reason for me to be ashamed,” Liedtke said, in her first interview about the legal case. “Whenever we are silent, they will do it to another person.” The complaint, sent to the Israeli attorney general, the Israel Prison Service’s legal adviser, the Department for the Investigation of Prison Guards (Yahas), and the commander of Givon prison, was a challenge to a “culture of impunity” for abuse of prisoners in Israel, said Liedtke’s lawyer, Muna Haddad. “It is Anna’s wish to seek justice and exhaust all avenues to hold the perpetrators of these acts accountable. We also want to raise awareness and see how the Israeli system responds when faced with our demand to open an investigation,” said Haddad, a lawyer with Adalah, a Palestinian human rights organisation in Israel. “Sexual violence and rape are recurring violations that have been perpetrated against Palestinian prisoners for nearly three years … We are now seeing an escalation where Israel is prepared to expand this conduct to foreign citizens acting in solidarity with Palestinians.” By refusing to be shamed, Liedtke has transformed the attack into part of her activism, becoming a voice for those still in Israeli jails or who might be targeted in future. She said: “I don’t think [speaking out] will lead to the end of rape in detention. But as a political woman I feel a responsibility to talk about it and with that, fight against it. “This is not just my personal experience, it is more systematic. And I cannot stress enough that it is way, way less than what Palestinian prisoners experience.” Israel has normalised torture of Palestinians held in its jails, while officials have celebrated abuse of foreign activists and denounced the failed attempt to prosecute soldiers over a well-documented assault and rape. The UN in May added Israel to a blacklist for sexual violence in conflict, citing abuse by security forces, including the rape of male detainees, and Britain this month raised concerns about sexual assault in Israel’s detention centres at the UN security council. Australian police are investigating rape and torture allegations made by flotilla participants in May, and French prosecutors have opened a war crimes inquiry into suspected torture and mistreatment of their citizens in Israeli detention. Liedtke was briefed by members of previous flotillas before setting sail from southern Italy on 30 September, on a large former ferry, with about 100 other activists. She tried to prepare mentally for the possibility of violence, including sexual assault, in Israeli detention, but later understood that that was almost impossible. She said: “You can know that they will sexually assault you, and you can tell yourself, OK, they will do that. And in the moment where it happens, it’s like you’ve never heard about it. Because you don’t know how your body will react.” Her advice to other activists now is as much political as practical. “You have to be convinced that this is the right mission. And in the end, understand that nothing can prepare you.” On 8 October, at about 4.30am, she was woken by the captain announcing: “This is not a drill, the Israelis are coming.” They boarded the boat, sent the activists to the canteen and set sail towards the Israeli port of Ashdod, arriving in the evening. Liedtke was taken for processing and said one fluent German speaker called her a “Nazi slut”. The first sexual assault came shortly after, during a strip-search, she said. Israeli law requires consent from a detainee before a strip-search, Liedtke’s lawyer said. If it is refused, a senior officer must come to hear objections and authorise any subsequent search in writing. Strip-searches are limited to visual inspection of a naked body and must be in a closed room with only female officers present. Liedtke said she refused to be strip-searched but was still forced to remove her clothes in an area only partly concealed by a curtain. Her naked body was visible to male soldiers walking past. “Some of them directly looked at us, while they were walking past,” she said. She refused to sign papers for rapid deportation because they would effectively amount to an admission she had entered Israel illegally. Liedtke had been taken forcibly to Israel from international waters. Later that night she was driven blindfolded and handcuffed to Ketziot prison, where she was strip-searched again, fully naked, without consent. “I told them I don’t want to do this, and they had searched me a few hours before, so why do they need to do it again,” she said. Those who agreed to the search were allowed to keep their underwear on, she said. She was given prison clothes and taken to a dirty cell with no access to clean drinking water. Deprived of sleep overnight by loud music, and repeated searches of the cell, including with dogs, she could hear screams from other parts of the prison. On 10 October, Liedtke was moved once more, to Givon prison. There she was again taken to an area only partly closed off from view by a curtain, and ordered to strip. When she refused, guards pulled off her clothes, groped her and forced her to kneel. One of them inserted her fingers into Liedtke’s vagina and then her anus, Liedtke said. “There were two and then later three female soldiers that told me to take off my clothes,” she said. “They started touching me. I said no. I told them I don’t want to be touched and that they were hurting me. Then they grabbed my hands, so I couldn’t move, then they pushed me down and I still tried to scream, and then they covered my mouth so I couldn’t scream.” Humiliation added to the pain of the physical assault. “I remember the male soldiers laughing, just standing there laughing. I know they were able to see everything because the curtain was not fully closed.” Liedtke believes the attack may also have been filmed because of the large numbers of security and body cameras used in prisons. Video and images of abuse and torture of detained Palestinians and activists have been published in Israel, by individuals and officials. The activists were deported to Jordan on 12 October. Liedtke had been on hunger strike the whole time but said she wanted a cigarette more than food. At a hotel in Amman the group were met by doctors and psychologists, and Liedtke took her first step towards going public, telling a friend and fellow journalist: “Make sure you include in your report that at least one woman was sexually assaulted.” At home in Germany she decided to speak about the rape at a December conference on political prisoners. When she did, intimidation was replaced by unexpected relief, she said, “like a knot was loosening slowly”. Other women from her boat got in touch to say they had had “the same experience”, and messages of support outweighed the attacks from strangers. “I was worried about mean comments, especially as it was female guards. I was worried about people questioning if it was really rape. There were people on the internet arguing about what I experienced, how [they] would define it, but not in a way that influenced me a lot.” She says she lives with trauma from the attack. “Right now, I’m OK. There are days when I don’t remember anything and there are days when I think it is never going to get better, but I think this is normal.” But she finds strength in the political commitment that originally brought her on board the flotilla, reinforced by the joyful welcome given to one flotilla boat that washed up empty on Gaza’s beaches. “This was worth it. Everything I went through was worth it for bringing at least a little hope, that the next flotilla will come.” The Israeli military “rejects allegations of abuse” by forces who intercepted Liedtke’s flotilla, a spokesperson said, referring further questions to the Israel Prison Service (IPS). An IPS spokesperson said: “The allegations described in your inquiry are categorically denied and are entirely unsubstantiated,” and the IPS “rejects any allegation of rape, sexual assault or systematic abuse by its personnel”. Information and support for anyone affected by rape or sexual abuse issues is available from the following organisations. In the UK, Rape Crisis offers support on 0808 500 2222 in England and Wales, 0808 801 0302 in Scotland, or 0800 0246 991 in Northern Ireland. In the US, Rainn offers support on 800-656-4673. In Australia, support is available at 1800Respect (1800 737 732). Other international helplines can be found at ibiblio.org/rcip/internl.html