The sea was deceptively calm last Tuesday as the MV Zaytouna-Oliva approached Gaza’s territorial waters. On board, 13 international activists, including two Canadian nationals, believed they were making the final push in their contentious maritime mission to deliver humanitarian supplies to Gaza. Within hours, they would find themselves in Israeli detention centers, sparking a diplomatic confrontation that continues to unfold.
“We knew there were risks, but international waters should mean international law applies,” says Emma Russell, 34, from Vancouver, speaking via phone after her release yesterday. Russell and fellow Canadian David Kronstein, 41, from Montreal, were among those detained when Israeli naval vessels intercepted their small aid flotilla approximately 35 nautical miles off Gaza’s coast.
The Israeli military states the vessel violated a legal naval blockade established in 2007. “The flotilla was intercepted in accordance with international law after multiple warnings,” said Lieutenant Colonel Nadav Shoshani, Israeli Defense Forces spokesperson, in a statement. “The vessel and participants were escorted to Ashdod port for processing.”
Global Affairs Canada has confirmed the detention and subsequent release of the two Canadian citizens. “Consular officials have been in contact with the detained individuals and their families to provide assistance,” said Jason Kung, spokesperson for Global Affairs Canada. “We continue to monitor the situation closely while respecting the privacy of those involved.”
This marks the seventh attempt by the international “Freedom Flotilla Coalition” to breach the naval blockade since 2010, when a similar attempt resulted in the deaths of ten activists during a confrontation with Israeli forces aboard the MV Mavi Marmara. No casualties were reported in this week’s interception.
The detention occurs against a backdrop of deteriorating humanitarian conditions in Gaza. According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), approximately 80% of Gaza’s 2.1 million residents depend on humanitarian assistance. Recent months have seen restrictions tighten on the flow of food, medicine, and construction materials through established land crossings.
“When official channels fail, civil society takes risks,” explains Dr. Mona El-Farra, director of the Middle East Children’s Alliance in Gaza. “These flotillas are symbolic, but they highlight the ongoing crisis ordinary Gazans face daily in accessing basic necessities.”
Israeli authorities maintain the naval blockade is essential for security, citing concerns about weapons smuggling to Hamas, which governs the Gaza Strip and is designated a terrorist organization by Canada, the United States, and the European Union. “Every vessel approaching Gaza waters undergoes thorough security screening,” said Yoav Mordechai, former head of COGAT, the Israeli defense body responsible for civilian affairs in Palestinian territories.
Critics of the blockade, including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, argue it constitutes collective punishment of Gaza’s civilian population, potentially violating international humanitarian law. The International Committee of the Red Cross has called the blockade “a crisis of human dignity.”
For the Canadian activists, the experience has been harrowing. “We were treated roughly during the initial boarding,” Russell claims. “Our personal effects were confiscated, and we had limited access to legal counsel during questioning.” Kronstein reports being held in a cell for 48 hours before consular officials were granted access.
The Canadian government has walked a diplomatic tightrope, neither explicitly condemning Israel’s actions nor endorsing the activists’ methods. “Canada supports the right of peaceful protest but encourages citizens to respect travel advisories and local laws when abroad,” Kung stated.
Israel’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Emmanuel Nachshon defended the detentions: “Participants were aware they were attempting to breach a legal blockade. This was a provocative act, not humanitarian aid delivery.” Israeli authorities note that approved humanitarian aid continues to enter Gaza through the Kerem Shalom and Rafah crossings, albeit at reduced levels that aid organizations describe as insufficient.
The incident has reignited debate over Gaza’s isolation and appropriate methods of protest. Dr. Michael Lynk, former UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian territories, suggests: “These flotillas succeed regardless of whether they reach Gaza. They focus international attention on the blockade itself.”
Upon release, the Canadian activists were deported and barred from entering Israel for ten years. Their vessel and cargo remain in Israeli custody. “The supplies—primarily medical equipment and solar panels—weren’t the point,” Kronstein reflected during a press conference in Athens yesterday. “The point was challenging a system that keeps two million people effectively imprisoned.”
As the activists make their way home, Global Affairs Canada advises Canadians against participating in future flotillas, noting the government’s limited ability to provide consular assistance in such scenarios. Meanwhile, humanitarian conditions in Gaza continue to deteriorate, with the World Food Programme reporting that food insecurity now affects 68% of households.
The waves have settled around Gaza’s coast for now, but the political ripples from this latest flotilla attempt continue to spread through diplomatic channels from Ottawa to Jerusalem.