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THU · 2026-04-30 · 08:51 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0430-72706
News/Israel deports two activists detained on/At least six Australian activists detained by Israel navy af…
NSR-2026-0430-72706News Report·EN·Human Interest

At least six Australian activists detained by Israel navy after Gaza flotilla boats intercepted

The Israeli navy intercepted boats from the Global Sumud flotilla in international waters, detaining at least six Australian activists. The flotilla, which departed from Italy with over 50 boats, aimed to deliver aid and volunteers to Gaza, which is under Israeli naval blockade.

Caitlin CassidyThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-04-30 · 08:51 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 4 min
At least six Australian activists detained by Israel navy after Gaza flotilla boats intercepted
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Briefing Summary

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The Israeli navy intercepted boats from the Global Sumud flotilla in international waters, detaining at least six Australian activists. The flotilla, which departed from Italy with over 50 boats, aimed to deliver aid and volunteers to Gaza, which is under Israeli naval blockade. Among the 14 Australian citizens onboard, only two remain in communication and are continuing towards Gaza. Families of the detained activists, including Newcastle's Zack Schofield, have expressed distress and criticized the Australian government's lack of intervention. CCTV footage reportedly shows Israeli Defense Forces boarding the vessels.

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Full report

4 min read · 852 words
Sarah Willing, the partner of Zack Schofield, one of the activists onboard the Global Sumud flotilla sailing to Gaza, along with his parents, Joanne and Peter Schofield. Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP View image in fullscreen Sarah Willing, the partner of Zack Schofield, one of the activists onboard the Global Sumud flotilla sailing to Gaza, along with his parents, Joanne and Peter Schofield. Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP At least six Australian activists detained by Israel navy after Gaza flotilla boats intercepted Spokesperson says just two out of 14 Australians remain in communication, after CCTV footage showed Israeli navy boarding vessels in international waters Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast The family of a Newcastle man among at least six Australians onboard boats that were intercepted by Israeli navy personnel in international waters has issued a tearful plea for his safety and lashed out at the Australian government for not intervening. More than 50 boats set sail to Gaza from Italy on Monday as part of the Global Sumud flotilla in the hope of delivering 500 tonnes of aid and volunteers to the Gaza Strip, which remains under naval blockade by Israel. Among those onboard the ships were 14 Australian citizens. On Thursday afternoon, Alexa Stewart, a spokesperson for the flotilla, said just two Australians – Jews Against the Occupation member Anny Mokotow and Brisbane resident Sam Watson – remained in communication and were still sailing to Gaza after 22 boats were intercepted in international waters west of the Greek island of Crete. View image in fullscreen CCTV footage posted online shows members of the IDF boarding flotilla vessels sailing to Gaza, which had 14 Australians onboard. Photograph: Global Sumud Flotilla/Reuters Stewart has alleged at least six Australians have been detained by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), including Newcastle climate activist Zack Schofield, University of Sydney student and Wiradjuri, Ngiyampaa and Wailwan man Ethan Floyd, Neve O’Connor, Dr Bianca Webb-Pullman, Surya McEwen and Cameron Tribe. Schofield’s partner, Sarah, said on Thursday that she wanted “every Australian to understand how scary this is”. “I got a text message telling me that he was OK and he loved me,” she said. “Then 15 minutes later I saw a video of him being abducted. How would you feel if that was your partner? Or your son? … How would you feel?” CCTV footage posted online showed members of the IDF boarding the six Australians’ vessels. Afterwards, pre-recorded messages were published to social media announcing they had been “kidnapped … against my will”. The remaining vessels carrying Australians had lost communication for at least four hours and were presumed to have been intercepted. The Guardian has not independently confirmed whether the Australians are now detained by Israel or the status of the vessels. The Israeli foreign ministry posted to X that it had found condoms and drugs onboard the “PR stunt flotillas”, a claim disputed by the flotilla’s media spokespeople. View image in fullscreen ‘I’m furious that our government hasn’t called me back yet’… Joanne and Peter Schofield, parents of Newcastle climate activist Zack Schofield. Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP Schofield’s parents, Joanne and Peter Schofield, said they were attempting to contact the foreign minister, Penny Wong. “He’s on the flotilla because he is kind, smart and caring,” Joanne said between tears. She said it was their expectation that the Australian government would “do everything they can” to secure the activists’ safety. “I’m really upset, this is very, very frightening,” she said. “I’m furious that our government hasn’t called me back yet, hasn’t said anything to how they’re ensuring … the Australians are safe, are being treated well, and will be released safely immediately … I want a response and I want it right now.” View image in fullscreen Zack Schofield speaking in Sydney before flying to Italy for the flotilla. Photograph: Supplied A spokesperson for the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said officials were “urgently seeking an update” from Israeli authorities and were “ready to provide consular assistance to any affected Australians”. But they said their “ability to provide support in Israel and Palestine is limited at this time due to the conflict in the Middle East”. “We continue to urge Australians not to join others seeking to break the Israeli naval blockade as they will be putting themselves and others at risk of injury, death, arrest or deportation,” they said. In a statement, the Global Sumud flotilla alleged activists, who are representing 55 countries, had been “threatened at gunpoint” while “engaged in legally protected activity under international maritime law”. “Earlier, multiple flotilla boats reported radio communications jamming. Military drones and vessels were sighted. An [Israel occupation forces] vessel ordered the flotilla to divert aid through Israeli-controlled channels,” they said. The previous Sumud flotilla in October 2025 resulted in seven Australians being detained by IDF, including McEwen. Wong, the Israeli foreign ministry and the Israeli embassy were approached for comment. The Times of Israel reported that “security sources” confirmed the Israeli navy began intercepting the flotilla late on Wednesday. Explore more on these topics Gaza flotilla Israel-Gaza war Gaza Israel news Share Reuse this content
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Keywords & salience

10 terms
gaza flotilla
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israeli navy
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activists detained
0.90
international waters
0.80
gaza strip
0.70
naval blockade
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australian government
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aid delivery
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israel defense forces
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climate activist
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