A diplomatic and humanitarian storm is unfolding after Israel intercepted the Global Sumud Flotilla, a civilian-led convoy carrying aid and nearly 500 activists to Gaza.
The naval raid has triggered an extraordinary backlash, including Colombia’s expulsion of Israeli diplomats, suspension of trade ties, and international protests stretching from Istanbul to Buenos Aires.
Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro made one of the strongest responses on October 1, 2025, announcing that all Israeli diplomats and economic representatives must leave the country after two Colombian citizens—Luna Barreto and Manuela Bedoya—were detained during the interception.
Petro described their seizure as “kidnapping in international waters” and vowed to pursue legal action against Israel. He also moved to revoke the trade agreement between Bogotá and Tel Aviv, framing the decision as both a diplomatic protest and a matter of national sovereignty.
“Another international crime has been committed by Netanyahu,” Petro declared on social media, referencing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, already wanted by the International Criminal Court for other alleged offenses.
The president further claimed that U.S.-supplied arms in Colombia could complicate security at home, and he ordered tighter protection for government buildings.
The flotilla, which set sail from Barcelona about a month ago, was composed of roughly 50 vessels. It carried food, medicine, and other relief supplies aimed at breaking Israel’s blockade of Gaza, where an intensifying humanitarian crisis has left hospitals overwhelmed and essential goods scarce.
On board were an array of high-profile figures, including Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg, South African MP Mandla Mandela—grandson of Nelson Mandela—and several European lawmakers.
The convoy broadcast its progress live, with activists chanting “Free Palestine!” as Israeli naval vessels, their transponders off, shadowed the fleet. According to reports, the interception occurred about 150 nautical miles from Gaza, well outside Israel’s territorial waters.
Activists accused Israel of piracy, noting that international maritime law generally guarantees freedom of navigation beyond 12 nautical miles from shore.
Israel’s government insisted that the flotilla was attempting to breach a legally enforced blockade, arguing that the mission entered an “active combat zone.” Officials offered to deliver the aid through established channels, but flotilla participants rejected the offer, citing repeated failures in the past.
Reactions were immediate and wide-ranging. Turkey branded the interception “barbaric” and “terrorism,” with President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan accusing Israel of “banditry” and promising to protect Turkish activists aboard. Memories of the deadly 2010 Mavi Marmara raid, in which Israeli forces killed 10 Turkish citizens, sharpened Ankara’s criticism.
In Malaysia, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim condemned Israel’s actions as trampling on the “conscience of the global community,” while pledging to hold Tel Aviv accountable for detaining Malaysians.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa called for the release of flotilla participants, highlighting the involvement of Mandla Mandela, and demanded that the aid be delivered to Gaza immediately.
In Europe, anger spilled onto the streets. Italian unions declared a nationwide strike in solidarity, while protests disrupted rail traffic in Naples and drew crowds in Rome.
Demonstrations also broke out in Madrid, Berlin, Athens, and Paris, where French left-wing leaders denounced Israel’s actions as piracy. Student unions across France, Belgium, and elsewhere vowed to escalate actions if the activists were not freed.
Across the Global South, criticism was fierce. Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif called the raid a “dastardly attack,” while Colombia’s Petro went further than most, cutting diplomatic and economic ties.
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Even Western governments expressed unease. The UK said it was “very concerned” about British nationals on board. Germany urged Israel to act with proportionality.
Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez defended the flotilla as purely humanitarian, remarking that “this mission would not exist if Israel allowed aid into Gaza.”
The United States, Israel’s closest ally, faced growing domestic pressure. Twenty Democratic legislators urged the White House to intervene, while advocacy groups like the Council on American-Islamic Relations condemned what they described as “piracy in international waters.”
The legality of Israel’s actions remains under sharp dispute. Under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, a nation’s jurisdiction typically extends 12 nautical miles from its coast, though exceptions exist during armed conflict.
It argues its blockade of Gaza is a military necessity to prevent weapons smuggling. Critics, however, contend that the blockade itself constitutes a form of collective punishment.
International law experts note that humanitarian aid missions may be justified even in contested zones if the occupying power fails to meet the population’s needs.
“Even if you consider the blockade legal, international law paves a humanitarian road from the high seas to Gaza,” said legal scholar Omer Shatz, who has previously litigated flotilla cases in Israeli courts.
Meanwhile, the humanitarian situation in Gaza is worsening. On the day of the interception, Israeli airstrikes killed at least 73 Palestinians, including civilians in a tent encampment in Deir el-Balah. Hospitals report severe shortages of fuel, medicine, and surgical supplies.
The Colombian delegation of the flotilla has now urged protests against Israeli-linked business associations, warning: “If they block humanitarian aid, we block the economic flow. All eyes on Gaza.”
The fate of the detained activists remains unclear, but the fallout has already strained Israel’s global standing, deepened calls for accountability, and placed its Gaza blockade under sharper scrutiny than at any point since the Mavi Marmara crisis.
As Petro summed up in Bogotá, the issue is bigger than diplomacy: “This is not only about Colombia. This is about international law and humanity.”
Al Jazeera












