Freed Gaza flotilla activists accuse Israeli forces of sexual violence and abuse while in custody
Activists on board a
humanitarian flotilla intercepted by
Israeli forces on their way to Gaza say they were subjected to beatings, torture and sexual violence while in detention.
The Global Sumud Flotilla, carrying 428 passengers along with food, medicine, and humanitarian supplies for civilians in Gaza, was intercepted over the course of several days after departing Turkey, with the final interception on Tuesday.
The group was detained before being deported to Turkey and their alleged treatment has already triggered international backlash.
The Israel-based human rights organization Adalah, which represents the flotilla activists, told CNN that its lawyers documented testimonies from participants who said they were attacked with tasers and rubber bullets and had been subjected to beatings that left them with suspected broken bones. A statement from the Global Sumud Flotilla added that activists had been subjected to sexual violence, including “multiple accounts of rape,” including “forcible penetration by a handgun.”
The Israel Prison Service told CNN that the “allegations raised are false and entirely without factual basis,” and that it “operates in accordance with the law.”
Adalah’s international advocacy coordinator Miriam Azem stood by the allegations. “In the past 10 years of Adalah representing activists on flotillas, this is by far the most severe violence and assaults that we’ve encountered,” she told CNN.
Adalah said they would let the activists who said they had experienced sexual violence speak for themselves. This was because some survivors did not want to go into detail about their assaults, Azem said, while others were still in Israeli detention at the time they spoke with Adalah, and feared repercussions.
Australian film maker and activist Juliet Lamont told CNN that she was beaten and sexually assaulted by five men in a shipping container on board what she called an Israeli “prison boat.”
peaking to Australian reporters from a hospital in Istanbul, Australian national Zack Schofield described what he called “a constant barrage of violence” and “brutality” while in detention.
“I myself was zip-tied in a torture position with my hands behind my back, for 40 minutes until I almost vomited from the pain. Then I had my head slammed into the table during the immigration process, constant knees to the chest, face, any kind of way they could there were pliers in my ears pulling them back,” he said, adding that he saw other people “chokeslammed” into the ground.