Dutch and Swiss pro-Palestinian activists who joined the Global Sumud Flotilla to Gaza are challenging bills from their governments for flights and consular assistance after they were detained and deported by Israel. The mission, which Israeli officials say was tied to Hamas and carried only a symbolic amount of aid, was intercepted at sea.
In early October, Israeli naval forces intercepted around 50 boats that were part of the Global Sumud Flotilla, a campaign whose organizers describe it as a civilian effort to challenge Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza. The Daily Wire reports that Israeli officials say the vessels carried less aid than a single truckload and that many of the boats were owned or financed by entities Israel identifies as fronts for Hamas.
According to the Daily Wire, Israeli authorities cite documents seized in Gaza that they say connect senior flotilla organizers to the Popular Conference for Palestinians Abroad, which Israel designated a terrorist organization in 2021 on the grounds that it serves as a foreign arm supporting Hamas operations overseas.
Among those detained after the flotilla’s interception were several Dutch nationals. The Dutch Foreign Ministry arranged their repatriation, describing the step as a rare consular exception, but made clear the activists would be required to reimburse the costs, in line with standard practice. One activist, Roos Ykema, received an invoice for €526 for a flight routed via Madrid. She has publicly refused to pay, arguing she was “forcibly deported” by Israel and saying she had risked her life as part of what she calls resistance to genocide, the Daily Wire reports. Invoices and correspondence cited by the outlet indicate that multiple Dutch participants told officials they wanted to return to the Netherlands “as soon as possible.”
Nineteen Swiss participants have also objected to charges ranging from 300 to 1,047 Swiss francs, which, according to the Daily Wire, cover prison visits, diplomatic interventions with Israeli authorities and repatriation flights.
Israel maintains that its naval blockade of Gaza is legal under international law and says it will stop attempts to breach it, particularly when vessels are, in its view, tied to Hamas. In statements quoted by the Daily Wire and other outlets, Israeli officials note that more than 1,200 aid trucks have entered Gaza over a two‑week period via approved land crossings, and say flotilla organizers rejected proposals from Italy and Israel to have their limited cargo delivered through those channels.
A separate but related incident occurred in June, when Israeli forces intercepted a British‑flagged yacht, the Madleen, organized by the Freedom Flotilla Coalition and carrying climate activist Greta Thunberg and 11 others toward Gaza. The yacht was diverted to the Israeli port of Ashdod and its passengers detained and later deported, according to accounts from the Israeli Foreign Ministry and reports by major news agencies and outlets, including the Associated Press, Reuters and Time magazine. Israeli authorities derided the voyage as a “selfie yacht,” saying it carried less than a single truckload of aid and that passengers were given water and food before being sent home. Thunberg and fellow activists have described the operation as a kidnapping in international waters and accused Israel of violating international law.
Israel has signaled that it will continue to block future flotilla attempts while insisting that humanitarian aid should move through established mechanisms rather than by sea convoys it regards as political provocations.