Kenneth O'Keefe

Activist

Birthday July 21, 1969

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace California, United States

Age 54 years old

Nationality United States

#29338 Most Popular

1969

Kenneth Nichols O'Keefe (born July 21, 1969) is an American-Irish-Palestinian citizen and activist and former United States marine and Gulf War veteran.

1996

O'Keefe created a marine conservation social enterprise "to protect and defend the marine environment" in Hawaii in 1996.

This enterprise conducted ghost net recoveries and rescues of endangered green sea turtle wrapped in monofilament fishing line.

O'Keefe became a pioneer in sea turtle rescues in Hawaii and led a campaign to create a marine sanctuary (Pupukea MLCD) on the North Shore of Oahu.

1998

In 1998 he joined an anti-whaling campaign in which he was bloodied when attempting to retrieve a boat belonging to the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, of which he was a crew member.

At this time he was being mentored by Paul Watson.

Eventually he served as the regional director for the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, in Hawaii.

2001

In 2001, he set fire to his United States passport.

Subsequently, he led the human shield action to Iraq and was a passenger on the MV Mavi Marmara during the Gaza flotilla raid, where he disarmed two of the Israeli commandos who boarded the ship, initiating a confrontation in which ten Turkish activists were killed.

According to the Southern Poverty Law Center O'Keefe gives speeches to white supremacist groups and endorses David Duke.

O'Keefe served as a United States marine in the First Gulf War.

According to his own website, he was discharged because he "spoke out openly about abuse of power by my 'superiors' and as a consequence I paid a heavy price. I realised that honour and integrity were virtues which are often punished rather than rewarded and the Marines supplied me with my first serious taste of injustice."

O'Keefe attempted formal renunciation of his U.S. citizenship in 2001, but

"O'Keefe has tried officially to renounce his citizenship three times without success, first in Vancouver [Canada] and then in the Netherlands. He then tried again in Baghdad, Iraq. His initial bid was rejected after the State Department concluded that he would return to the United States — a credible inference, as O'Keefe in fact had returned immediately. After his second attempt, he waited seven months with no response before he tried a more sensational approach. He went back to the consulate at The Hague, retrieved his passport, walked outside, and lit it on fire. Seventeen days later, he received a letter from the State Department informing him that he was still an American, because he had not obtained the right to reside elsewhere. He had succeeded only in breaking the law, since mutilating a passport is illegal. It says so right on the passport."

2002

In December 2002, O'Keefe started the human shield action to Iraq group.

Intended to "make it politically impossible for them to bomb" Iraq by placing western civilians as "shields" at non-military locations, about 75 activists traveled over land from London to Baghdad in two double-decker buses.

Critics of the human shields argued that their mission would only protect Saddam Hussein.

O'Keefe argued the "people of Iraq" would suffer the most from a war and publicly acknowledged Hussein as a "violent dictator".

At its height about 300 human shields were in Baghdad, but due to challenges internally, with the Iraqi dictatorship and O'Keefe's deportation from Iraq, the numbers dwindled.

2010

In June 2010, O'Keefe was aboard the MV Mavi Marmara.

During the Gaza flotilla raid, he was one of the passengers who disarmed IDF commandos boarding the ship.

According to O'Keefe, he disarmed one from the 9mm pistol he was carrying, removing its bullets before hiding the pistol with the intention to keep it as evidence of the Israeli action against the ship.

O'Keefe said he subsequently helped disarm another of the ship's IDF soldiers, by prising the commando's fingers from the rifle he was holding.

O'Keefe said of the experience that it was like "combat but without combat weapons".

He said, "We had in our full possession, three completely disarmed and helpless commandos" who were "surrounded by at least 100 men ... [W]e could have done anything with them", adding that "woman provided basic first aid, and ultimately they were released, battered and bruised for sure, but alive. Able to live another day."

According to Greta Berlin, spokesperson for the Free Gaza Movement who was involved in the flotilla, O'Keefe "was responsible for some of the deaths on board the Mavi Marmara. Had he not disarmed an Israeli terrorist soldier, they would not have started to fire."

O'Keefe was among those arrested and detained in Israel, where he (according to himself and another activist) was beaten at Tel Aviv airport when he resisted deportation while still in Israeli custody.

He claims a policeman hit him on the head with a truncheon and that he was choked until he almost blacked out.

He said he spent two more days in a detention facility in the airport after the incident.

O'Keefe said the Irish consul general tried to convince him to agree to leave and asked him to wash the blood off his face but he refused.

A video showing his bloodied face was released upon his arrival in Istanbul.

On June 6, 2010, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) charged that O'Keefe is an "anti-Israel extremist" and "operative of the Hamas Terror organization".

According to the IDF he was entering the Gaza Strip in order to "form and train a commando unit for the Palestinian terror organization."

He responded: "If they had a supposed terrorist in their possession, why the hell did they let me go?"

He acknowledged having had meetings with Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh and other senior Hamas officials.

In October 2010, O'Keefe joined the "Road to Hope", a humanitarian aid convoy to Gaza.

Organizers were seeking to transport the convoy from the port of Derna, Libya to el-Arish, Egypt on board the private-charter roll-on/roll-off ferry M.V. Strofades IV, which left port unexpectedly without any of the aid after the ship's owners and captain got into an argument with the aid workers, although seven Libyan port officials and ten of the Road to Hope team were on board.

Organisers of the convoy claimed that despite paying a shipping agent for the charter of the ship, O'Keefe and the others were "kidnapped" from the port by the owner and the captain of the ship who "went nuts".

The ship owners claimed that the activists had boarded the ship without any contract or charter.

Due to a "tense atmosphere" aboard the ship, and (as he claimed) receiving no response from the Libyan authorities, the captain feared for the safety of the ship and decided to sail out of Libyan waters.