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How luxury brands are tapping into the Labubu craze

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  • Labubu dolls have become a $27 status symbol. Now, high-end brands are testing whether fans are willing to pay luxury prices for crystal-encrusted Labubus or $2,500 bags with the ugly-cute monster.
  • While Labubu mania is new, luxury labels have capitalized on cuteness with other characters from Snoopy to Totoro.
  • Luxury industry experts told CNBC why these high-end character collaborations are here to stay.
A brown Louis Vuitton Monogram coated-canvas mini top-handle bag with tan vachetta leather rolled handles and a yellow-and-orange pumpkin motif is carried with two Labubu plush bag charms during Copenhagen Fashion Week, on August 07, 2025 in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Edward Berthelot | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

Labubu dolls have emerged as a must-have accessory in luxury fashion, with celebrities like Blackpink’s Lisa pairing the toys with Louis Vuitton and Hermès bags.

The coveted blind box toys — collectible plushes that look like a rabbit-esque monster with jagged teeth — are a relatively inexpensive status symbol at $27, though they routinely sell at a premium on the resale market. Now, high-end brands are testing whether Labubu fans are willing to pay luxury price points.

In June, a collection of 14 customized Labubus dressed in designs by Carhartt and Japanese brand Sacai raised $337,500 at auction with the top lot fetching $31,250. At the recent U.S. Open, tennis champion Naomi Osaka touted crystal-encrusted Labubus that cost some $500 from A-Morir. Due to high demand, the “Lablingblings” take four to six weeks for delivery, according to the New York custom eyewear and accessories maker.

Next up, the dolls are teaming up with Parisian maison Moynat. In just over two weeks, the fashion house is releasing a collection of handbags, leather accessories and, of course, bag charms that feature Labubus and two other characters by artist Kasing Lung, the Hong Kong Dutch artist who created Labubu. Moynat’s signature monogrammed canvas totes start at $2,150 and bag charms retail for $450.

While Labubu mania is new, high-end brands from Tiffany to Loewe are increasingly featuring characters like Pikachu and Totoro to court younger and digitally savvy customers. Done right, these collaborations not only generate hype, but pay off.

Omega’s “Silver Snoopy” Speedmaster watches are coveted collectors items, with its 2015 model, originally priced at $7,350, worth nearly $38,000 on the secondary market, according to market data provider WatchCharts. Jimmy Choo’s two collections with Sailor Moon, with the most recent one released in October, quickly sold out. Some brands create their own endearing characters, like Louis Vuitton dropping a line of “Louis Bear” stuffed animal bag charms in July.

Boston Consulting Group’s Jeff Lindquist told CNBC that these collaborations have picked up in popularity in the past decade to target customers who can afford high-end items but aren’t fashion-obsessed.

“Cute is not trivial. It is strategic,” said Lindquist, partner at BCG, where he advises luxury fashion and beauty brands. “It performs incredibly well on platforms like TikTok where virality and cultural relevance are what drives the visibility and the desirability of the brands.”

Moynat’s Bertrand Le Gall said the collaboration with Lung is a way for the 176-year-old maison to stay culturally relevant and resonate with customers.

“The cute elements, even though they have this deep artistic value and this deeper design value, I think we are playing on the emotional value of of everything,” said Le Gall, the image and communication director. “This emotional value is so important when it comes to a house like ours with a very long legacy and historical background.”

‘Element of cute’

French maison Moynat has partnered with Kasing Lung, the artist behind Labubu, on a limited collection of handbags and accessories.
Courtesy of Moynat

Gen Z customers are especially looking for emotional value, according to Lindquist. Many have pulled back their spending as they have felt the effect of inflation and see less value in traditional luxury goods.

“Gen Z sees luxury less as craftmanship and artistry and status and more as mirrors to their identities and their beliefs,” he said.

Daniel Langer, professor of luxury strategy at Pepperdine University, compared the draw of characters to that of celebrities.

“The characters stand for something, and those characters also have a fan base,” he said. “There’s people who really love them.”

But to drum up hype, collaborations, like Labubu blind boxes, should tap into the thrill of the hunt, he added. In the case of the Moynat collection, it will not retail online and only sell at one Moynat boutique at a time from Oct. 11 to early 2026

“Everyone who has a Labubu can tell a personal story about how they got them,” said Langer, who described buying an authentic but reasonably priced one for his daughter as “quite an undertaking.”

Naomi Osaka of Japan poses for a photo with her Labubu after defeating Greet Minnen of Belgium in the first round on Day 3 of the US Open at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on August 26, 2025 in New York City.
Robert Prange | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

Capsule collections give brands the opportunity to experiment with new looks and broaden their audience, according to consultant Alexander Thiel.

“Collabs give you a license in the eye of the consumer to do something that otherwise for your brand would be unexpected and therefore opening it up to new audience,” said Thiel, who led McKinsey’s consumer packaged goods and retail business in Switzerland until September.

That said, brands run the risk of alienating their core audience, according to Thomai Serdari, marketing professor at New York University. For instance, while Loewe’s three collections with Studio Ghibli were successful, it would not have made sense for a more traditional brand to sell Totoro purses or wallets with the mouse from “Spirited Away.”

“In the case of Loewe, it made perfect sense, because they had an intentional shift from something very low-key and very traditional quiet luxury before the acquisition by LVMH,” she said. “Then within the portfolio of LVMH, they became the creative kid, the smaller brand that experiments and is playful.”

She also cautioned against trend chasing, saying a phenomenon like Labubu mania can “collapse as quickly as it was built.”

Shares of Pop Mart, the manufacturer of Labubu dolls, have sunk by roughly 21% since peaking in late August on analyst fears that the frenzy is fading. However, the stock is still up nearly 200% year to date, and some analysts are still bullish on Pop Mart’s prospects. HSBC’s Lina Yan noted that Labubu only started actively collaborating with brands like Coca-Cola in 2024.

“The supply and demand of Labubus won’t tilt 180 degrees,” Yan wrote. “We believe it is too early to call for a peak.”

It’s too soon to judge Labubu’s staying power. But Thiel said he thinks that the Labubu craze and influx of bag charms like Louis Bear indicate consumers are looking for innocent distractions from economic anxiety.

“We see that there’s a lot of anxiety and a lot of uncertainty, and not only in the parts of the socioeconomic demographic that are struggling economically, but across all levels,” he said. “I think it’s not surprising that there’s a bit of clinging to wholesomeness and that element of cute. I think it speaks to something deeper.”

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The Trump administration is changing Covid, childhood vaccine recommendations – here’s what it means for you

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  • New recommendations last week from an influential vaccine panel handpicked by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. broke with long-standing U.S. precedent on Covid shots and childhood immunization.
  • The changes by the group, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, could complicate access in some states and add to public confusion around U.S. vaccine policy.
  • Still, several health experts say there are steps Americans can take to navigate the new guidance and try to secure the vaccines they or their children want or need.
A proposed vote by Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Retsef Levi is displayed during an Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) meeting at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., Sept. 19, 2025.
Alyssa Pointer | Reuters

New recommendations last week from an influential vaccine panel handpicked by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. broke with long-standing U.S. precedent on Covid shots and childhood immunization.

The changes by the group, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, could complicate access in some states and add to public confusion around U.S. vaccine policy.

Still, several health experts say Americans can take steps to try to secure the vaccines they or their children want or need. For some patients in certain states, access and coverage may not change much at all.

During a meeting in Atlanta last week, ACIP weakened Covid shot recommendations; voted against a combination jab against measles, mumps, rubella and chickenpox, or MMRV, for children under the age of 4; and indefinitely postponed a vote on whether to change its advisory around the hepatitis B vaccine administered at birth. 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, whose director the Trump administration ousted in August, still needs to sign off on the recommendations. The agency typically adopts the guidance of ACIP, which issues recommendations on who should receive certain shots and which vaccines insurers must cover at no cost.

Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) Chair Dr. Martin Kulldorff speaks with committee members and presenters before the start of an Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) meeting at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., Sept. 19, 2025.
Alyssa Pointer | Reuters

“They didn’t physically take the vaccines away, but they made it more confusing, they made it more bureaucratic, and by doing that, it disincentivizes people from getting vaccinated,” said Dr. Amesh Adalja, senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. “It makes it harder for some people to get vaccinated. It creates more friction.” 

Two regional health alliances spanning several states are issuing broader vaccine recommendations than the federal government, and many states have signed directives that aim to preserve Covid shot access. At the same time, several major insurance plans have pledged to continue covering vaccines based on the panel’s previous guidance issued by former members.

For patients uncertain about the changes, experts recommend turning to trusted health-care providers or vetted medical groups that have issued their own vaccine recommendations

Many of the ACIP members emphasized concerns about vaccine side effects, raising doubts about shots long-proven safe and effective. That’s no surprise: Kennedy purged the committee in June and named 12 new members, many of whom have long criticized vaccines. 

The chaotic two-day meeting followed previous steps by Kennedy to limit access to vaccines, including the CDC’s decision to drop Covid shot recommendations for healthy kids and pregnant women, and the Food and Drug Administration’s limits on who can get new Covid jabs.

If you’re concerned about access to shots against Covid, MMRV and hepatitis B, here’s the latest on those vaccines and what you can do to get them.

Should I get a Covid vaccine? 

The answer should be yes if you’re at high risk of severe illness from Covid, according to health experts and major medical organizations.

Meanwhile, some experts said those at low risk should at least consider getting a Covid shot, or can make their decision based on consultation with a provider.

ACIP advised that people 6 months and up receive vaccines based on “shared clinical decision-making,” a choice made between a health-care provider and a patient or their guardian. The group also voted to emphasize that for those under 65, the Covid vaccine is most beneficial for people at high risk of severe illness from the disease.

In other words, the panel is recommending that everyone consult a health-care provider when deciding whether to receive a shot.

But some health experts said the panel should have recommended that all people at high risk of severe illness from Covid get the shot. That includes adults ages 65 and above; those under that age with at least one condition that puts them at high risk, such as cancer, obesity or chronic kidney disease; pregnant women; and children under the age of 2. 

Vaccination is paramount for those groups, as it helps prevent severe Covid and the risk of hospitalization or death due to the virus. 

“Their recommendation is treating Covid as if it’s the same for everybody irrespective of risk, and that’s the wrong way to think about it,” said Johns Hopkins’ Adalja. “Any high-risk group should always stay up to date with the vaccine.”

That view largely aligns with guidance from professional medical organizations: 

  • The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that all children ages 6 months through 23 months get an updated shot, along with older children ages 2 years through 18 years in certain risk groups or who are in close contact with people at high risk. 
  • The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends that patients receive an updated Covid vaccine at any point during pregnancy, when planning to become pregnant, in the postpartum period or when lactating. 
  • The American Academy of Family Physicians recommends that all adults 19 years and older receive an updated shot, with a particular emphasis on those at high risk or people who have never received a Covid vaccine. 

Two regional health alliances comprised of several states – The Northeast Public Health Collaborative and the West Coast Health Alliance – have based their Covid vaccine recommendations on the guidance from those three organizations. 

Adalja said it is reasonable for a person at low risk of severe illness to rely on a conversation with a provider when determining whether to get a Covid vaccine. 

Meanwhile, Richard Dang, an associate professor of clinical pharmacy at the University of Southern California, said he recommends everyone consider getting a Covid shot regardless of their risk level. Dang is also a liaison member representing the American Pharmacists Association in the Covid vaccine work group of ACIP.

Apart from reducing the severity of illness from the virus, some data shows vaccines can help prevent some symptoms of long Covid and other complications that people develop after an infection, according to Dang. 

Healthy individuals should also think about family and others around them who may be at higher risk of severe illness, said Dr. Pamela Rockwell, a clinical professor of family medicine at the University of Michigan.

“Vaccinating yourself may potentially save another life by not potentially infecting them with a vaccine-preventable disease,” Rockwell said. 

Several medical experts have emphasized the importance of vaccines as the U.S. heads into the fall and winter, when infectious diseases, particularly respiratory viruses like Covid, spread more easily. While hospitalizations and deaths from Covid have decreased significantly from previous years, the virus is still spreading.

How is Covid shot access changing? 

Access to Covid vaccines will largely hinge on the state a patient lives in, so health experts recommend Americans check with their providers, local health departments or nearby pharmacies about how they can get a shot and whether they need to meet any new requirements. 

Adalja said the easiest way to access a shot may be to go to a doctor’s office. But the vast majority of Americans get their vaccines from pharmacies. Pharmacy rules vary by state, and not all states currently allow pharmacists to give shots outside of the CDC recommended population without a prescription. 

Access will likely be unchanged in states within the two regional health alliances. The Northeast Public Health Collaborative is made up of New Jersey, New York state, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maine, Rhode Island, Delaware, Maryland, Vermont and New York City. Meanwhile, the West Coast Health Alliance has California, Washington, Oregon and Hawaii.

In many of those states, governors had previously issued executive orders to preserve Covid vaccine access – though directives have varied. For example, in California, a new law allows pharmacists to independently prescribe and administer the shot as long as the state health department recommends it. The law also requires insurance plans to cover the vaccines the state endorses.

But as of Sept. 23, pharmacists in Florida are not allowed to provide vaccinations without a prescription from a health-care provider like a physician. 

“There are some states where the pharmacist may be skittish to give out the Covid vaccine, and that may impact access for some people,” University of Michigan’s Rockwell said.  

Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) Chair Dr. Martin Kulldorff speaks with committee members and presenters before the start of an Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) meeting at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., Sept. 19, 2025.
Alyssa Pointer | Reuters

In a statement Monday, CVS said it currently offers the updated Covid vaccine to patients with an authorized prescription in the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Utah and West Virginia. CVS said it will be able to offer the Covid shot without a prescription in those states after the CDC approves ACIP’s new recommendations around the vaccine.

The company said it already offers Covid vaccines without a prescription requirement in all other states. 

In a separate statement, Walgreens said it continues to administer the shot without prescriptions in the “vast majority” of states. But the company will offer the updated Covid vaccines at locations to people ages 3 and older, no prescription required, after the CDC adopts the panel’s recommendation. 

Meanwhile, insurance coverage for Covid vaccines should largely remain the same for many children and adults. 

ACIP’s recommendation allows for coverage “through all payment mechanisms,” according to an HHS release. That includes the Vaccines for Children Program, Children’s Health Insurance Program, Medicaid, Medicare and plans through the federal health insurance marketplace established by the Affordable Care Act.

One major health insurance group last week said its member plans will cover all vaccines through 2026 based on ACIP recommendations in place as of Sept. 1 — before the changes made by the new slate of members.

Member plans of the group, America’s Health Insurance Plans, collectively provide coverage and services to more than 200 million Americans. That includes more than a dozen Blue Cross Blue Shield plans, Centene, CVS‘ Aetna, Elevance Health, Humana, Kaiser Permanente, Molina and Cigna.

But the group doesn’t cover everyone, so experts recommend that patients contact their plans about the Covid shot. For example, UnitedHealthcare, the country’s largest private health insurer, is not a member of the group.

Can my child take the MMRV vaccine? 

Sherry Andrews, right, holds 13-month-old Jaqi Herrera’s hand after administering the first MMR vaccine dose to Herrera at the City of Lubbock Health Department in Lubbock, Texas, U.S. Feb. 27, 2025. 
Annie Rice | Reuters

If you have a child under 4, it may be more difficult for them to access the combination MMRV vaccine as their first dose. Children older than 4 shouldn’t have an issue getting that vaccine.

On Thursday, ACIP voted to no longer recommend the combination MMRV shot for children under age 4. Instead, the committee said young children should receive one vaccine for chickenpox and a different shot known as MMR that inoculates against measles, mumps and rubella.

The CDC still recommends two doses of measles-containing vaccine for children, starting with the first dose at age 12 months to 15 months, and a second at age 4 years to 6 years. The agency previously recommended that children under 4 take the separate MMR shot and chickenpox vaccine or – if families and physicians have a preference – the MMRV vaccine for their first dose.

ACIP’s vote does not affect children older than 4, meaning that they can still take the MMRV shot as their second dose. 

Much of the panel’s discussion last week focused on the slightly increased risk of seizures accompanied by fever in young children who have received the first dose of the combined MMRV vaccine. 

But Dr. Dean Blumberg, chief of the division of pediatric infectious diseases at UC Davis Health, said that young children can get those so-called febrile seizures from anything that causes a fever, such as an ear infection or a cold. He called it “disappointing to restrict choices for parents” by recommending against the MMRV shot for younger kids.

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But Blumberg also noted that the vote may not make much of a difference for some parents.

About 85% of children currently get the MMR and chickenpox vaccines separately for their first dose, according to data collected by the CDC. About 15% of kids get a single dose of the combination MMRV vaccine.

“It made no sense that they would actually need to take a vote on this because there was nothing new to say about it. The majority of people were getting the shots separately anyway,” said Johns Hopkins’ Adalja. “But when ACIP can get everybody revved up about a combination vaccine and take some kind of vote like that, it scores points with the anti-vaccine movement – even though it’s really irrelevant to the practice of medicine.” 

During a briefing on Monday, President Donald Trump suggested that the MMR vaccine should be separated into three shots, alleging that “it seems to be that when you mix them, there could be a problem.” 

The MMR shot has long been safe and effective, and is credited with saving hundreds of thousands of lives in the U.S. Vaccines that protect against just one of the three diseases are also not available in the U.S. due to widespread adoption of the combined shot. Separating the shot into three could hurt uptake, as it could require children to make multiple trips to the doctor’s office rather than one.

The U.S. has already logged the most measles cases this year since the disease was declared eliminated in the country more than two decades ago.

Can my baby take the hepatitis B shot?

The short answer is, yes.

ACIP postponed a vote on whether to delay the first dose of the hepatitis B shot from birth to at least one month for most babies born in the U.S.

The decision means that the committee’s current recommendation – that all infants receive a hepatitis B vaccine within 24 hours of birth – will stay in place until the group meets again at a later date. It’s unclear when the panel will convene again to do so.

The postponed vote will only affect the timing of the first dose of the hepatitis B vaccine series. The second would still be given one to two months after birth, with a third dose between six and 18 months of age.

Delaying the so-called birth dose would change a safe and highly effective recommendation that was introduced in 1991 and is credited with virtually eliminating the disease in young kids.

“What they’re considering is ignoring history,” said UC Davis’ Blumberg. He said infants face a high risk of getting chronically infected, which can lead to severe health problems, including liver cancer and failure, and death.

Blumberg said eliminating a universal birth dose recommendation will “return us to where we were, having about 1,000 kids every year getting infected with hepatitis B during that period” of their life.

Trump on Monday advocated delaying hepatitis B vaccines until age 12. He suggested that most cases of the disease are sexually transmitted, but infants are susceptible to getting the disease from their mother during childbirth.

“They don’t understand that the fact that you vaccinate at birth is to protect the child who’s coming through the birth canal of a person who could be infected. That’s what the hepatitis B dose is about,” said Johns Hopkins’ Adalja. “The vaccine is safe in that child.”

He said some women test positive after their initial test for the virus during pregnancy or can have a false negative, making the birth dose a crucial tool for protection.

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NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell says league could renegotiate media deals as soon as 2026

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  • The NFL could begin renegotiating its media rights deals as soon as next year, well ahead of schedule, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell told CNBC in an exclusive interview.
  • Goodell said he believes the NFL is leaving money on the table based on the significant increase in media revenue for other leagues, like the NBA and NHL.
  • The league would need agreement from its current media partners — Disney, Comcast’s NBCUniversal, Paramount, Amazon and Fox — to start discussions on any new deal before the end of the 2029-30 season.
NFL wants to accelerate TV rights renegotiations to as early as next year, Roger Goodell says

The NFL could begin renegotiating its media rights deals as soon as 2026, four years ahead of the current agreement’s opt-out clause, Commissioner Roger Goodell told CNBC in an exclusive interview.

A new media rights deal could potentially add billions of dollars to the league’s coffers. The league needs agreement from its current media partners — Disney, Comcast’s NBCUniversal, Paramount, Amazon and Fox — to start discussions on any new deal.

The NFL signed an 11-year, $111 billion media rights deal in 2021 that contains a league opt-out clause after the 2029-30 season for all of its media partners except Disney, which has one extra year of rights.

Both sides may be incentivized to strike new rights agreements if it means the league can increase annual revenue and media partners can extend control of NFL rights for years to come.

“I think our partners would want to sit down and talk to us at any time, and we continue to dialogue with them. I like that opportunity,” Goodell said. “Obviously it’s not going to happen this year. But it could happen as early as next year. That could happen.”

NFL programming is the most watched content on traditional television. Last year, 72 of the top 100 programs were NFL games, according to data collected by Nielsen. The year before, 93 of the top 100 were NFL games.

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“The reason why we felt so strongly about the option is the landscape is changing. It could be a long-term deal with the benefit of having that stability and security of it. But I think the reality of it is it changes so quickly that you want to have the ability to move. I think those options are going to give us a lot of flexibility to potentially go earlier,” said Goodell.

Other major professional leagues, such as the NBA and NHL, have dramatically increased their TV revenue in the last year by striking new deals with media partners. Goodell admitted to watching other recent sports’ media deals and said, in comparison, the NFL is leaving money on the table.

Representatives for Amazon, Disney’s ESPN, Fox, NBCUniversal and Paramount-owned CBS declined to comment.

Accelerating to 2026

Accelerating media talks may be tricky in the early part of 2026 from a regulatory perspective, as ESPN has a pending deal with the NFL that would see the league acquire a 10% stake in the network. Renegotiating a media rights deal while that acquisition is still pending may present a conflict of interest both sides would like to avoid.

If that deal goes through, ESPN may be more open to play ball with the NFL on a future media deal given the league’s minority ownership.

Another delay to expedited renegotiations could come courtesy of a potential 18th week of regular season play. The league may want the additional week before it locks in new media deals, but such a change would require approval by the NFL Players Association, which currently only has an interim leader.

The NFL will want to weigh any new deal with flexibility to add new partners, such as YouTube and Netflix. Both companies have now carried games for the NFL. YouTube streamed a Week 1 game this year, and Netflix made its NFL debut on Christmas Day last year and will continue that tradition this season with two more games.

Accelerating new media deals for professional football could affect MLB as well.

That league plans on renegotiating its media rights at the end of the 2028 season. If the NFL moves first and scores big increases from media partners, it’s possible media companies will feel more constrained to spend on other sports. It’s also possible MLB could use a large NFL increase as evidence for why its content should get a bigger bump in fees as well, given the value inherent in live sports where commercials can’t be skipped.

A new deal for the NFL could also increase the league’s salary cap in future seasons, giving teams more money to spend on players and potentially leading to roster expansion.

NFL team valuations are also largely tied to the league’s TV deals. Franchise valuations have soared in recent years, with the average NFL team now worth $7.65 billion, according to CNBC’s Official 2025 NFL Team Valuations — up 18% from last year.

A large bump in revenue would likely keep that momentum going.

Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal, which owns CNBC. Versant would become the new parent company of CNBC upon Comcast’s planned spinoff of Versant.

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Tánaiste to raise overnight attack on Gaza flotilla at UN meeting as Italian navy sent to assist

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TÁNAISTE SIMON HARRIS has said he intends to raise the overnight attacks on the Global Sumud Flotilla, which is carrying aid and activists to the Gaza Strip in Palestine in an effort to break Israel’s blockade. 

People on board the flotilla vessels said last night that some of their boats had come under attack from drones that dropped various items, including corrosive chemicals and explosive, non-lethal devices.

The fleet of 50 vessels is currently in international waters off the coast of Greece.

Israel said on Monday it would not allow the boats to reach Gaza.

There were no injuries reported and the vessels were mostly only lightly damaged, although one member of the flotilla told The Journal that one of the boats’ sails had been ruined. 

Reacting to the news in New York, Tánaiste and Foreign Affairs Minister Harris said he was concerned at the reports from people on board the flotilla. He said he believes there are 22 Irish citizens aboard the boats, including elected representatives. 

“It is clearly a breach of international law to have any activity that is targeting a humanitarian flotilla,” he said. 

Harris added that although there is clear travel advice in place regarding travel to areas of conflict, it is also clear “what they’re [activists on the flotilla] trying to do here”.

“They’re trying to highlight what is a horrific genocide underway in Gaza and a man-made famine that is starving civilians, that’s starving children.”

The Tánaiste said he would be raising this issue during a meeting of the global alliance for implementation of the two-State solution and working with his counterparts in countries that also have citizens on the flotilla to ensure their safety.

One of the Irish politicians taking part in the voyage to Gaza is Sinn Féin Senator Chris Andrews.

Despite the intimidation overnight, Andrews and others aboard the flotilla boats have said they remain undeterred. 

Andrews said in a post on X his vessel had been “attacked by multiple drones overnight” and hit by “four different devices”. 

“The bloodthirsty Israeli regime must be stopped,” Andrews said.

“This is the most serious assault by Israel on this flotilla since it first departed from Barcelona over three weeks ago.

He said the Irish government “needs to act” by sending an observer boat to follow the flotilla.

“The Irish Government has a responsibility to protect its citizens on this flotilla, as well as to stand up for human rights and justice,” Andrews said in a statement. 

He also called on members of the public to contact the Department of Foreign Affairs the Taoiseach, the Tánaiste, and local public representatives to call on them “to intervene to protect this flotilla”.

Italian navy 

Italy, meanwhile, has dispatched a navy frigate to assist its citizens and politicians on board boats in the aid flotilla.

Italy’s foreign minister, Antonio Tajani, has asked the Italian Embassy in Tel Aviv “to gather information and to reiterate its previous request to the Israeli government to guarantee the absolute protection of the personnel on board”.

Italian Defence Minister Guido Crosetto said he had dispatched the navy vessel “to ensure assistance to the Italian citizens on the ‘Flotilla’”.

“The vessel is already en route to the area for possible rescue operations”, he said.

Crosetto expressed “the strongest condemnation” of the “attack” on the flotilla using “drones by currently unidentified perpetrators”.

Sinn Féin MEP Lynn Boylan said this morning that she would be writing to the EU Commission “and urging them to make immediate calls for the safe passage of this aid”.

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“These are civilian ships, that are carrying humanitarian aid for the starving people of Gaza,” she said.

“The EU must not stand idly by while innocent civilians are put in danger by doing what the EU hasn’t had the courage to do.”

Intimidation

Leigh Brosnan, a barrister from Ireland who is aboard the flotilla’s independent legal support boat, told The Journal that there had been at least ten drone attacks. 

She is part of a group of lawyers who are acting as independent observers monitoring the situation.  

Brosnan said that the drones used last night were not the same type they have seen surveiling the fleet. They were larger and had no lights to make them visible. 

She said that while last night’s incident did not involve lethal force, it still represented an escalation.

“It could be categorized as kind of more psychological and intimidatory,” she said.

“However, it does also represent a significant escalation of acts of aggression and of dangerous, harmful acts towards completely unarmed, non-violent civilians.”

Videos posted on the group’s Instagram account show flashes in the night as explosions are heard near the boats in the flotilla. 

“Multiple drones, unidentified objects dropped, communications jammed and explosions heard from a number of boats,” the Global Sumud Flotilla said in a statement, without adding whether there were any casualties.

“We are witnessing these psychological operations firsthand, right now, but we will not be intimidated,” the statement said.

German human rights activist and flotilla member Yasemin Acar said in a video she posted on Instagram that five vessels had been attacked.

“We are carrying only humanitarian aid,” she said. “We have no weapons. We pose no threat to anyone. It is Israel who is killing thousands of people (and) starving a whole population.”

In an earlier video, Acar said the activists had “sighted 15 to 16 drones”, adding that their radios had been jammed as loud music could be heard.

One video posted by the flotilla’s official Instagram page showed an explosion it said it recorded from the Spectre boat at “01:43 GMT +3″.

In another video posted by the same page, Brazilian activist Thiago Avila said four boats had been “targeted with drones throwing devices” just before another explosion was heard in the background.

Not the first time

The Global Sumud Flotilla set sail from Barcelona earlier this month and is currently made up of 51 vessels, most of which are situated off the Greek island of Crete.

Sumud is the Arabic word for steadfastness. 

Those on board the boats are sailing to the Gaza Strip in Palestine, which is under an Israeli siege that has created a famine in parts of the territory. After nearly two years of its war on Gaza, Israel has killed more than 65,000 people and been accused of committing genocide.

The flotilla had already been targeted in two suspected drone attacks in Tunisia, where its boat had been anchored before resuming its voyage towards Gaza.

Among its high-profile participants is environmental activist Greta Thunberg, who said today that her government in Sweden has offered the flotilla no support. 

Israel blocked two earlier attempts by activists to reach Gaza by sea in June and July.

While Israel claims it allows aid into the Gaza Strip unhindered, NGOs, UN agencies and governments that have sent aid all say this is not the case. 

report published by the medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) yesterday details the arbitrary and inconsistent restrictions on the passage of food, medical supplies and other items into Gaza. 

“Rules, procedures and requirements changed frequently, forcing humanitarian actors constantly to adjust and reconfigure their approaches,” the report said. 

With reporting from AFP and Christina Finn in New York

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