News Israel

Thunberg, 170 Other Activists from Gaza-Bound Flotilla Deported

Spanish activists allege abuse, say they were blindfolded, dragged on ground, put in cages, insulted and made to sign papers they didn’t understand; Israel calls accusations lies.

Swedish activist Greta Thunberg (center) at Ramon International Airport on Oct. 6, 2025, before being deported along with other Gaza flotilla activists // Photo Credit: Foreign Ministry/Times of Israel

Swedish activist Greta Thunberg and 170 other members of the intercepted Gaza-bound Global Sumud Flotilla were deported from Israel to Greece and Slovakia, according to the Foreign Ministry.

Photos shared by the ministry showed Thunberg and other deportees making their way through the Ramon International Airport in southern Israel in prison-issue gray sweatsuits and white t-shirts.

The deportees hail from Greece, Italy, France, Ireland, Sweden, Poland, Germany, Bulgaria, Lithuania, Austria, Luxembourg, Finland, Denmark, Slovakia, Switzerland, Norway, the U.K., Serbia, and the United States, said the ministry.

The flights to Greece and Slovakia brought the number of Sumud flotilla activists deported by Israel to 341, with 138 remaining.

Arriving home, several detainees have complained of abuse and harsh conditions during their time in Israeli custody.

Israel insisted that “all the legal rights of the participants in this PR stunt were and will continue to be fully upheld,” adding that “the lies they are spreading are part of their pre-planned fake news campaign.”

Spanish activists from the Gaza flotilla arrive at Madrid-Barajas Airport on Oct. 5, 2025, after being deported from Israel // Photo Credit: Thomas COEX/AFP/Times of Israel

The only violence, said the ministry on X, came from a Spanish participant who bit a medical staffer at Ketziot Prison.That activist was identified by Spanish media as Reyes Rigo Cervilla from Mallorca.

Thunberg and other detainees have alleged that they were held in unlawful conditions by Israel.

Spanish activists alleged mistreatment on their arrival in Spain after being deported.

“They beat us, dragged us along the ground, blindfolded us, tied our hands and feet, put us in cages and insulted us,” lawyer Rafael Borrego told reporters at Madrid’s airport.

Former Barcelona Mayor Ada Calau, who was also on the flotilla, said there had been “mistreatment, but that was nothing compared to what the Palestinian people suffer every day.”

Israeli Navy troops board Global Sumud Flotilla boats in the Mediterranean Sea, early Oct. 2, 2025 // Screenshot: YouTube/Global Sumud Flotilla/Times of Israel

Spanish journalists Carlos de Barron and Nestor Prieto said Israeli authorities signed a statement on the deported activists’ behalf claiming they had entered Israel illegally.

“They placed documents in Hebrew in front of us, denying us the right to a translator, and we did not receive consular assistance because they did not allow the (Spanish) consul to enter the port of Ashdod,” Prieto said.

Israel intercepted 42 vessels of the Sumud flotilla, which carried a symbolic amount of humanitarian aid, and was the latest attempt by activists to challenge Israel’s years-long naval blockade on Gaza.

Similar attempts were intercepted in June and July, amid spiking international anger at Israel over the hunger crisis in the Strip. Israeli officials have denounced the Sumud and other missions as pro-Hamas stunts.

In an August report that Israel has rejected, the UN declared a famine in parts of northern Gaza. Israel, which blocked the entry of aid into Gaza for nearly three months until May, has accused Hamas of systematically looting aid entering the Strip since the war there was sparked when the terror group invaded Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

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