Eleven Australians Detained by Israeli Forces on Gaza Aid Flotilla Deported
Quick Look
- Eleven Australians detained by Israeli forces while sailing on a humanitarian aid flotilla to Gaza have been deported.
- The activists were intercepted Monday and held in Israel before being flown to Istanbul.
- Their detention followed controversial actions by Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Eleven Australians were detained by Israeli forces on Monday while participating in the Global Sumud flotilla, which aimed to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza. The interception and subsequent detention led to international condemnation, particularly after a video emerged of Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir abusing the captured activists.
Eleven Australians who were detained by Israeli forces while sailing as part of a flotilla to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza have been deported.
Israel on Thursday said it had deported all the foreign activists it seized from the Global Sumud flotilla, after a global outcry over their treatment in custody that led to countries summoning Israeli diplomats for a formal dressing down.
It was understood that the Australians were transferred by bus to Ramon airport in southern Israel, where Australian consular officials were due to seek access to them before departure.
Israel planned to deport the Australians by charter flight to Istanbul, Turkey, overnight Australian time, where consular officials would again visit them at the airport to assist.
Neve O’Connor, Sam Woripa Watson, Anny Mokotow, Isla Lamont, Juliet Lamont, Surya McEwen, Zack Schofield, Dr Bianca Pullman-Webb, Gemma O’Toole, Violet Coco and Helen O’Sullivan have been held by Israeli forces since their boats were intercepted on Monday.
Joanne Jaworowski, Schofield’s mother, said she was relieved about her son’s release, but had not received any information about his welfare.
“It is almost unbearable for me to think about what he has gone through over the more than three days at the hands of the brutal Israeli forces, and I shudder to think about the even worse treatment that the 11,000 Palestinian prisoners suffer every single day,” she said.
“My heart will not be calm until I have heard directly from Zack that he is safe and unharmed.”
Jacinta McEwen, Surya McEwen’s mother, said “we are overcome with relief that our kids are coming home,” but added she was angry about the circumstances.
On Wednesday, a flotilla spokesperson said a total of 428 activists sailing on 50 vessels had been detained by the IDF after being intercepted and that their welfare was unknown.
A spokesperson for Adalah, Israeli human rights lawyers supporting the flotilla, said the Israeli prison service and state officials had confirmed that all detainees had been released from the Ktzi’ot detention facility and were en route to deportation.
The move to deport the activists came after Israel’s national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, was widely condemned in Australia and around the world after posting a video of himself abusing bound activists captured from the flotilla.
In the video, dozens of men and women are seen kneeling in rows, with their foreheads to the ground and their hands zip-tied behind their backs.
Ben-Gvir waved an Israeli flag and shouted: “Welcome to Israel, we are the landlords.”
“I tell prime minister Netanhyahu give them to me for much more time. Give them to us for the terrorists’ prisons,” the minister said.
The Australian foreign minister, Penny Wong, said the images were “shocking and unacceptable” and that she had asked Australia’s ambassador to Israel to make representations to Israel to reiterate the government’s call for the release of the detained Australians.
Before news of the Australian detainees’ release was made public, the Israeli ambassador, Hillel Newman, condemned Ben-Gvir’s actions, but said the IDF’s interception had been handled with “great sensitivity”.
“No one out of the 400-plus people that were on the flotilla – no one was harmed,” he told the ABC.
“The interception itself was done with great sensitivity by the state of Israel, by our security forces.”
Earlier on Thursday, Newman addressed reporters at Parliament House in Canberra.
“There can be ministers in Australia, politicians in Australia, even part of a party that is ruling, that can do things that are disgraceful. The question is, how you respond and whether you condemn it. In this case, Ben-Gvir was condemned by the leadership of the state of Israel.”
He said Ben-Gvir’s humiliation of the activists had been “condemned by the government of Israel entirely”.
“It’s not acceptable, it’s disgraceful … it does not reflect our values … and therefore is condemned and declared disgraceful and harmful to the state,” the ambassador said.
Open Questions
- What specific conditions were the activists held under?
- Will there be any further diplomatic repercussions between Australia and Israel?
- What is the current status and welfare of the 11,000 Palestinian prisoners mentioned by Joanne Jaworowski?
- What was the exact nature of the 'great sensitivity' with which the IDF claims the interception was handled?




