logo
Australian activists allege they were ‘brutalised psychologically' after Israeli military detained Gaza aid boat

Australian activists allege they were ‘brutalised psychologically' after Israeli military detained Gaza aid boat

The Guardian6 days ago
Two Australian activists say they were 'brutalised psychologically' and treated 'like criminals' by the Israeli military, including being strip-searched, shackled and denied external communication, after a boat they were on was intercepted and detained while attempting to transport aid to Gaza as part of the Freedom Flotilla Coalition.
The journalist Tania 'Tan' Safi and human rights activist Robert Martin were among 21 activists on board the Handala when it was intercepted on Sunday and transported to Israel.
It had carried food, baby formula, nappies and medicine, as Palestinians continue to starve in what UN-backed hunger experts have called a 'worst-case scenario of famine' unfolding.
On Friday morning local time, the Australians landed at Sydney airport after spending days in Israeli custody. Safi told reporters they were still 'a little bit wobbly' and felt 'very sore and weak'. The Handala crew had previously confirmed they would go on a hunger strike if the Israel Defense Forces intercepted the boat and detained its passengers.
'It feels like a bit of a dream at the moment to be honest … it's been a rough ride,' Safi said. 'We were dehydrated and exhausted. We've been disconnected from the world.'
Safi said at least 30 IDF members boarded Handala when it was intercepted, and claimed all were armed, some with four guns.
'They knocked me in the leg with one of their machine guns,' Safi said.
'They were playing this odd psychological game of offering water and food with the camera crew, trying to get us to accept things from them, but none of us would. We don't want to take anything from an entity that is starving babies to death.'
Sign up: AU Breaking News email
Safi said that after arriving at the port of Ashdod, about 40km south of Tel Aviv, their bags were taken and they were placed in an interrogation room. Many items were still missing, they said.
They confirmed reports that US labour activist Chris Smalls was physically assaulted by the IDF – including being choked and kicked in the legs.
'Chris, the only black man, was pinned down by seven or eight men,' Safi said.
'When I asked about him they came into the room and dragged me out by my arms, I'm still bruised from it.
'They pulled me out and threw me down on the floor, they made me take off all my clothes, they strip-searched me right there, made me squat up and down … they treated us like we were criminals.'
Eventually, Safi said they were able to see someone from the Australian embassy, who lobbied for the pair to be able to contact their friends and family and to access legal representation.
'In these prisons, we saw face-to-face the soullessness and the cruelty and brutality,' Safi said, adding that they had woken to the sounds of a fellow inmate 'howling and screaming and crying in pain'.
'There were moments where they would handcuff me and grab the handcuffs and just throw me against the wall.'
Martin said he had been 'manhandled' along with a few others when initially demanding legal representation.
Sign up to Breaking News Australia
Get the most important news as it breaks
after newsletter promotion
'We had no rights … I have a lot of medication, they didn't allow any medication at all,' he said. 'The Australian government demanded I be able to make phone calls to my loved ones, they did not allow me to do that either, and anybody else.'
Eventually, Martin said, the pair were shackled and transported from Tel Aviv to Jordan. In Jordan, they received assistance from the embassy and were taken to hospital, where they were temporarily deemed unfit to fly due to their weak condition.
'We thought they were going to just dump us there, that was very, very scary for us, not knowing, having no phone, no money, no access to anything,' Martin said.
Safi said they did not realise how poor their condition was until they were hooked up to the IV in hospital and told they were 'really unwell'.
'I just passed out and slept for like 16 hours,' Safi said.
'I couldn't sleep [in prison] … they shine the torch in your face until you wake up, or they bang on the door every time you fall asleep.
'We did not commit any crimes. They tried to get us to sign documents that said we had entered Israel illegally, which is not true … we were taken completely against our will and brutalised psychologically in every way.'
The last boat sent by Freedom Flotilla, the Madleen, was intercepted by the Israeli army in international waters on 9 June and towed to Ashdod.
It carried 12 campaigners on board, including the Swedish activist Greta Thunberg, who were eventually expelled by Israel. In 2010, nine flotilla activists en route to Gaza on board the Mavi Marmara flagship vessel were shot a total of 30 times by Israeli soldiers. Five were killed by close-range gunshot wounds to the head.
The Israeli embassy in Canberra and Israeli ministry for foreign affairs were approached for comment.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Indonesia readies island medical facility for 2,000 wounded Gazans
Indonesia readies island medical facility for 2,000 wounded Gazans

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Indonesia readies island medical facility for 2,000 wounded Gazans

JAKARTA, Aug 7 (Reuters) - Indonesia will convert a medical facility on its currently uninhabited island of Galang to treat about 2,000 wounded residents of Gaza, who will return home after recovery, a presidential spokesperson said on Thursday. Muslim-majority Indonesia has sent humanitarian aid to Gaza after Israel started an offensive in October 2023 that Gaza health officials say has killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, whether fighters or non-combatants. "Indonesia will give medical help for about 2,000 Gaza residents who became victims of war, those who are wounded, buried under debris," the spokesperson, Hasan Nasbi, told reporters, adding that the exercise was not an evacuation. Indonesia plans to allocate the facility on Galang island, off its island of Sumatra and south of Singapore, to treat wounded Gaza residents and temporarily shelter their families, he said, adding that nobody lived around it now. The patients would be taken back to Gaza after they had healed, he said. Hasan did not give a timeframe or further details, referring questions to Indonesia's foreign and defence ministries, which did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment. The plan comes months after President Prabowo Subianto's offer to shelter wounded Palestinians drew criticism from Indonesia's top clerics for seeming too close to U.S. President Donald Trump's suggestion of permanently moving Palestinians out of Gaza. In response to Trump's suggestion, the foreign ministry of Indonesia, which backs a two-state solution to resolve the Middle East crisis, said at the time it "strongly rejects any attempt to forcibly displace Palestinians". A hospital to treat victims of the COVID-19 pandemic opened in 2020 on Galang, which had been until 1996 a sprawling refugee camp run by the United Nations, housing 250,000 of those who fled the Vietnam War.

Occupying Gaza would be a historic mistake for Israel
Occupying Gaza would be a historic mistake for Israel

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Occupying Gaza would be a historic mistake for Israel

The Israeli media reports that prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu is about to push for Israel to occupy Gaza. This has been long in the offing. Some members of Netanyahu's government have, ever since the horrific terrorist atrocities on October 7 2023, talked about removing the entire population of Gaza and replacing them. An American plan – we don't know how serious – was to involve foreign occupation and the creation of an American-administered Mediterranean Riviera in Gaza. The leaders of the Israeli settler movement, meanwhile, have protested near the border with Gaza and demanded that they be permitted to settle the strip as they have settled in the West Bank. A groundswell of support in Israel – by no means a majority – considers the indefinite takeover of Gaza to be the only permanent solution to the war. I believe this is mistaken. Occupying Gaza is a terrible idea and would be a grave mistake if the Israeli government and Knesset agree to it. Occupation tends to create more problems than it solves; and it becomes an open wound, a staging post for all of a nation's domestic and foreign enemies. An occupation soon proves itself a point of vulnerability, not a demonstration of a nation's strength and resolve. It is no surprise that hundreds of retired Israeli security officials, including former heads of intelligence agencies, have recently issued a letter to Donald Trump and called on him to pressure Netanyahu to end the war rather than continue it indefinitely. Western countries know well the perils of occupation. After the September 11 attacks in 2001 – former president Joe Biden's favourite comparison for October 7 – the United States deposed the rulers of the Taliban in Afghanistan and Saddam's Iraq and settled in for significant occupations of both countries. Initially at least, these were mounted with British and international help. In the realms of highest theory, these occupations might have borne fruit. The Afghan economy grew at a rate unseen since the 1970s. Infant mortality collapsed. The population doubled. The number of Afghans who were literate after twenty years without the Taliban in Kabul dwarfed the population who could read in 2001. Iraq nowadays is a very flawed democracy. Recent visitors to Baghdad tell me they cannot believe how prosperous and peaceful it seems. But the United States still lost those wars. It was still utterly humiliated and defeated. America, it turned out, simply wanted to rule Afghanistan less than the Taliban did, and to rule Iraq less than Iraq-based proxies with ties to Iran. There is no reason to think Israelis will be keener to rule Gaza in a decade than those who live there. Hamas's leadership has been devastated; the Palestinian Authority is led by 89-year-old Mahmoud Abbas. Some Israeli policymakers might see a vacuum there to be filled with good foreign governance. But this would be false. The truth is that, in the modern world, no matter your reasons and no matter what you think you are doing for the territories under your occupation, the resentment and unhappiness of those living there will win out. We cannot forget that Israel occupied Gaza from 1967 to 2005. When that occupation ended, Hamas came to power on a tide of grievance and threats. The only alternative to the same result would be not just be a forever war but a forever occupation – a permanent Afghanistan, an eternal Vietnam. Every issue with the food supply, with electricity and water, would become Israel's problem. So would every unnatural civilian death. Most countries would not wish the administration of Gaza upon their worst enemies. Israel's leaders would be better not to take it on willingly.

Israel's security cabinet expected to meet to sign off plans for expanded Gaza operation – Middle East crisis live
Israel's security cabinet expected to meet to sign off plans for expanded Gaza operation – Middle East crisis live

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Israel's security cabinet expected to meet to sign off plans for expanded Gaza operation – Middle East crisis live

Update: Date: 2025-08-07T06:42:45.000Z Title: Israel's security cabinet expected to meet tonight to sign off plans for expanded Gaza operation Content: Israel's security cabinet is expected to meet on Thursday evening and sign off on plans for an expanded operation despite reported serious misgivings from senior military officers. Yesterday, the Israeli military put parts of Gaza City and Khan Younis under new enforced displacement orders. The move comes amid fears that the country's prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, is preparing to order the full occupation of the Palestinian territory later this week. Israeli online newspaper, the Times of Israel, citing various Hebrew media reports, added that the cabinet is expected to approve 'a phased plan to conquer vast new areas of the Gaza Strip, potentially over five months, newly displacing around a million Palestinians'. Additionally, it would aim to destroy Hamas and pressure the group to release all remaining hostages, the publication reported. Public broadcaster Kan also reported that mediators Egypt and Qatar were pressuring Israel, via the US, not to implement the plan, while also urging Hamas to resume negotiations. In other developments: The humanitarian situation in Gaza continues to be very severe, an EU official told Reuters after the EU's foreign policy and humanitarian arms updated member countries late on Wednesday on the status of an agreement reached with Israel last month on boosting humanitarian access to Gaza. Israel's destruction of Gaza has left starving Palestinians with access to only 1.5% of cropland that is accessible and suitable for cultivation, according to new figures from the UN. This is down from 4% in April, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), suggesting Israel has continued to target Palestinian farmland since initiating a complete blockade in early March. On Wednesday, Gaza's health ministry reported that five more people had died from starvation in the coastal strip, which has been plunged into a devastating hunger crisis owing to Israel's complete block on aid entering earlier this year. Jordan reported, on Wednesday, that an aid convoy of 30 trucks that had left for Gaza had been attacked by militant Jewish settlers on entering Israel. After the attack, the second in days, Jordan accused Israel of failing to act to prevent repeated assaults. Naomi Klein and Angela Davis are among dozens of international scholars and writers who have signed a letter to the Guardian calling on the UK government to reverse the ban on Palestine Action. Signatories from major academic institutions around the world also say they are 'especially concerned' about the ban's possible impact on universities across Britain and beyond. The UK prime minister Keir Starmer has been urged by Ed Davey, the Liberal Democrat leader, to call Donald Trump to encourage him to use his influence to block Israel's plans for a 'full occupation' of Gaza. In a statement, Davey said: '[Israeli PM Benjamin] Netanyahu's latest proposals for the occupation of all of Gaza are utterly horrifying.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store