Friday, May 1, 2026
13.8 C
New York

Israel Intercepts Global Sumud Flotilla 600 Miles from Gaza, Detains 175 Activists Near Crete

Israeli naval forces boarded at least 22 vessels of the Global Sumud Flotilla in international waters west of Crete overnight, detaining roughly 175 activists from more than 40 countries. Turkey condemned the seizure as ‘an act of piracy’ as 36 remaining boats kept sailing east.

Israeli naval forces intercepted at least 22 vessels of the Global Sumud Flotilla in international waters west of the Greek island of Crete in the early hours of Thursday, detaining roughly 175 activists from more than 40 countries, organizers and Israel’s Foreign Ministry confirmed. The seizure took place more than 600 miles from Gaza — far beyond Israel’s declared maritime exclusion zone — and immediately drew international condemnation.

The flotilla, which set sail from Barcelona earlier this month, had grown to more than 70 boats and over 1,000 participants by the time interceptions began, according to NPR and the Washington Post. Organizers said the convoy was carrying medical supplies, baby formula, water-purification equipment and symbolic cargo intended to break Israel’s nearly two-decade-long naval blockade of the Gaza Strip. A live ship-tracker on the activists’ website showed 36 vessels still under way by mid-morning Thursday.

In a post on X, Israel’s Foreign Ministry said it was transferring ‘about 175 activists from more than 20 boats’ to Israel for processing and eventual deportation. Foreign Minister Gideon Saar later announced that, in coordination with Athens, the detainees would be transferred to a Greek port rather than disembarked at Ashdod — a procedural shift that activists’ lawyers said was designed to short-circuit Israeli court challenges to the boardings.

Turkey’s Foreign Ministry called the operation ‘an act of piracy’ and demanded the immediate release of all detained civilians. Spain, Ireland, Italy and Malaysia — whose nationals are among the detained — issued formal protests through diplomatic channels. The flotilla coordinating committee, in a statement carried by Al Jazeera, called the boardings ‘a dangerous and unprecedented escalation, the abduction of civilians in the middle of the Mediterranean, over 600 miles from Gaza, in full view of the world.’

The interception arrives as media-access pressure on Israel mounts. The leaders of AP News, BBC, CNN, Reuters and AFP have jointly called on the Israeli government to lift its ban on independent foreign-press access to Gaza, arguing that two and a half years into the war, the blockade on journalists is now itself a story. The flotilla seizure — staged at sea, in international waters, against unarmed civilians — is unlikely to ease that pressure.

For NewsRescue readers, the episode underscores a hard truth that mainstream coverage has danced around: the legal ground for boarding civilian vessels in international waters is, at best, contested. Whatever one’s view of the flotilla’s politics, the precedent matters. A blockade enforced 600 miles from its declared zone is no longer a blockade — it is a maritime claim, one that other powers will note, and one that other powers may eventually emulate.

Sources

Most Popular

Pentagon’s UAP Caseload Tops 2,000 as Hegseth Doubles Down on Trump’s Disclosure Pledge — and the FY2026 NDAA Forces a Reckoning

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth says his team is 'digging in' on releasing UAP records. AARO's open caseload has crossed 2,000. The fiscal-2026 National Defense Authorization Act would compel the Pentagon to brief Congress on every UAP intercept by NORTHCOM-aligned commands going back to 2004. The disclosure question is no longer hypothetical.

Why Vitamin D Deficiency in Childhood May Be Programming Autoimmune Disease — McGill Team Maps the Mechanism

A McGill University team has shown that mice unable to produce vitamin D develop a smaller thymus with fewer cells and signs of premature 'leaky' immune aging — a mechanistic explanation for why the world's most consistent autoimmune-prevention nutrient is also one of its most ignored.

Trump-Putin May 9 Ceasefire Floated as Ukraine Hits Tuapse for Third Time and Strikes Perm Pipeline

After a 90-minute Trump-Putin call, Russia signaled openness to a temporary May 9 ceasefire timed to V-E Day. Ukraine, meanwhile, hit Russia's Tuapse Black Sea oil refinery a third time in two weeks and claimed responsibility for an explosion at a Perm pipeline facility — even as Odesa took its heaviest residential strike in months.

Texas Supreme Court Now Holds the Onion–Infowars Question as Alex Jones Calls Thursday His ‘Last Show’

The satirical site The Onion's bid to acquire Alex Jones's Infowars has bounced from a Houston bankruptcy court to the Fifth Circuit and now to the Supreme Court of Texas. A receiver has stopped paying Infowars's rent and internet. Jones told viewers Thursday's broadcast was his last 'official' show.

The Fed’s ‘Great Illusion’ Meets the Debt Doom Loop: Why ZeroHedge Says the Math No Longer Works

Two ZeroHedge analyses dropped on the same day argue the Federal Reserve's reputation for foresight is a marketing exercise — and that the U.S. sovereign-debt arithmetic has crossed a threshold from which there is no graceful exit. NewsRescue walks through the numbers behind the alarm.

Recent

Pentagon’s UAP Caseload Tops 2,000 as Hegseth Doubles Down on Trump’s Disclosure Pledge — and the FY2026 NDAA Forces a Reckoning

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth says his team is 'digging in' on releasing UAP records. AARO's open caseload has crossed 2,000. The fiscal-2026 National Defense Authorization Act would compel the Pentagon to brief Congress on every UAP intercept by NORTHCOM-aligned commands going back to 2004. The disclosure question is no longer hypothetical.

Why Vitamin D Deficiency in Childhood May Be Programming Autoimmune Disease — McGill Team Maps the Mechanism

A McGill University team has shown that mice unable to produce vitamin D develop a smaller thymus with fewer cells and signs of premature 'leaky' immune aging — a mechanistic explanation for why the world's most consistent autoimmune-prevention nutrient is also one of its most ignored.

Trump-Putin May 9 Ceasefire Floated as Ukraine Hits Tuapse for Third Time and Strikes Perm Pipeline

After a 90-minute Trump-Putin call, Russia signaled openness to a temporary May 9 ceasefire timed to V-E Day. Ukraine, meanwhile, hit Russia's Tuapse Black Sea oil refinery a third time in two weeks and claimed responsibility for an explosion at a Perm pipeline facility — even as Odesa took its heaviest residential strike in months.

Texas Supreme Court Now Holds the Onion–Infowars Question as Alex Jones Calls Thursday His ‘Last Show’

The satirical site The Onion's bid to acquire Alex Jones's Infowars has bounced from a Houston bankruptcy court to the Fifth Circuit and now to the Supreme Court of Texas. A receiver has stopped paying Infowars's rent and internet. Jones told viewers Thursday's broadcast was his last 'official' show.

The Fed’s ‘Great Illusion’ Meets the Debt Doom Loop: Why ZeroHedge Says the Math No Longer Works

Two ZeroHedge analyses dropped on the same day argue the Federal Reserve's reputation for foresight is a marketing exercise — and that the U.S. sovereign-debt arithmetic has crossed a threshold from which there is no graceful exit. NewsRescue walks through the numbers behind the alarm.

Five Mississippi Middle Schoolers Hailed as Heroes After Stopping Runaway Bus When Driver Collapsed

About 40 students were on board the Hancock Middle School bus when driver Leah Taylor lost consciousness during an asthma attack. Five sixth graders divided the work in seconds: one grabbed the wheel, one pumped the brakes, one called 911, one alerted the district, and one placed Taylor's inhaler in her hand.

Two Big Biology Wins: How Killer T Cells Strike With Lethal Precision and How the Brain Sorts Smell

Researchers reported this week that the body's killer T cells form a tightly organized 'contact zone' to destroy diseased cells with surgical precision — and a separate team has mapped how olfactory receptors are arranged in the nose. Plus: new data on why GLP-1 drugs work better for some patients than others.

Big Tech’s $665 Billion AI Bet: Alphabet Soars, Meta Slides as Q1 Earnings Reveal Capex Reckoning

Four hyperscalers spent $130 billion on AI infrastructure in a single quarter — more than three times the inflation-adjusted cost of the Manhattan Project — and project up to $665 billion for the full year. Investors rewarded Alphabet, punished Meta, and noticed that nearly half of Google's record profit came not from search or cloud, but from its Anthropic stake.
spot_img

Related Articles

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Popular Categories

spot_img
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x