Activists freed from Israeli detention following the interception of a Gaza -bound aid flotilla have reported that they were subjected to physical and sexual abuse, flotilla organisers said on Friday, with at least 15 reporting sexual assaults, including rape.
"At least 15 cases of sexual assaults, including rape. Shot with rubber bullets at close range. Tens of people’s bones broken," organisers of the Global Sumud Flotilla posted on Telegram.
"While the world’s eye is trained on the suffering of our participants, we cannot emphasize enough that this is a mere glimpse of the brutality Israel imposes daily on Palestinian hostages," the statement added.
The reports come after the Israeli Prison Service (IPS) on Wednesday doubled down on its abusive treatment of activists forcibly detained, despite scores of testimonies detailing beatings, interrogation and humiliation as well as rape and sexual abuse.
The IPS responded to a barrage of international criticism after a video showed far-right Israel Public Security Minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, grinning as the flotilla detainees were being handcuffed, pushed, dragged and assaulted.
"Upon receiving the detainees, the prison guards were required to act to maintain order and security at the site. All actions were carried out in accordance with procedures and professional considerations," the IPS said.
The IPS also claimed that some of the detainees being shown in widely circulating videos were not under the responsibility of the IPS when they were being filmed.
However, rights groups have said that humiliation, sexual abuse and torture of detainees and prisoners have become systematic in Israel.
Dr Mimi Syed, a US-based physician who volunteered in Gaza amid Israel’s war on the enclave, told The New Arab that Israel’s treatment of those aboard the flotilla is illegal.
"You cannot treat activists and humanitarian workers this way. It’s absolutely outrageous how there’s witnesses saying that people were raped and obvious signs of force being used – I saw some of the photos of the activists which show signs of bruising and fractures, things like that which are absolutely unnecessary," she said.
"There is video recording of officials deliberately assaulting some of these activists which is just unheard of, I’m not surprised as this is something the Israeli government has been doing to civilians in Gaza, so doing to activists in other countries is still right on par with what they have demonstrated to the world in the last two and a half years," she continued.
Several photos and videos shared this week showed flotilla activists being forced to kneel down with their heads on the ground, while Israeli prison officers are surrounding them.
The footage, some of which was shared by Ben-Gvir, was condemned by several states, while Poland, France, Italy, Canada, Australia, Belgium, the Netherlands and the UK summoned Israeli ambassadors to clarify why their citizens were mistreated.
The liberal Israeli newspaper Haaretz asked the country’s foreign ministry if the treatment of the flotilla activists was acceptable, but there was no response.
"When a country has complete impunity to do what they want, nothing really is out of bounds for them. They will do what they need to achieve their goal which is a land grab, ethnic cleansing, genocide, the displacement of millions of people. It’s not just in Gaza, it’s in the West Bank and Lebanon," Syed continued.
Activists aboard the Global Sumud Flotilla, who are now in Istanbul, also revealed on Friday that the abuse they face included rubber bullets being fired at close range, tasers to the face, stun grenades thrown into groups of people, stress positions for hours under bright lights, the forced removal of hijabs and sexual taunting. They said the sexual violence included strip searches, groping, the pulling of genitals, and rape. According to organisers, based on testimonies from those released from detention, some of the most horrifying accounts come from those aboard a single vessel, dubbed "torture boat". "I can say that all were in many ways abused, not one single person walking with nothing. Among them there were 36 fractures, many broken ribs, torso, shoulders, and back. People were in agony. People were not breathing [due to the broken ribs]," Veronica Otero, told reporters. Testimonies of abuse, rape Over 50 boats took part in the Global Sumud Flotilla (GSF), with 430 people on board from more than 40 countries, and since armed Israeli naval commandos began intercepting the fleet in international waters, many have detailed the abuse they faced.
One Australian activist, Zack Schifield, who has since been deported to Istanbul, said all the members of the flotilla were treated brutally.
"Her hands [and] feet were zip-tied together, and then she was dragged around the rest of the processing centre, before she was taken into a prison bus," he told reporters, referring to an Irish woman who was part of the flotilla group.
"There’s no consistency to the violence. It was really at the whim of whichever guard was in front of you," he continued, adding that he saw many people receive similar or worse treatment.
Juliet Lamont, a film-maker from Australia, said Israeli soldiers sexually assaulted and beat her, noting she witnessed others – at least 40 – being left with broken bones, while others were sedated and tasered.
The activists said prison guards restricted access to food and water, and were left to sleep on cold, wet floors for days with no mattress or blankets, in cramped conditions. Brazilian activist Thiago Avila told The New Arab he was beaten unconscious and Israeli forces threatened to kill him.
Meanwhile, Luca Poggi, an Italian economist who was aboard the flotilla, confirmed the reports of sexual abuse: "We were stripped, thrown to the ground, kicked. Many of us were tasered, some were sexually assaulted, and some were denied access to a lawyer," he told reporters after he was deported to Rome.