Israeli forces reportedly detain Saad Edhi, others after intercepting Gaza aid flotilla

Published May 18, 2026
An Israeli naval boat intercepts the Global Sumud Flotilla en route to Gaza, in an attempt to deliver aid, at sea on May 18, 2026. —Reuters
An Israeli naval boat intercepts the Global Sumud Flotilla en route to Gaza, in an attempt to deliver aid, at sea on May 18, 2026. —Reuters

Saad Edhi, son of prominent social worker Faisal Edhi, was reportedly detained by Israeli forces on Monday along with other members of the Global Sumud Flotilla after at least 10 boats were intercepted in the eastern Mediterranean.

The organisers of the flotilla said Israeli forces had intercepted 10 of their boats and that contact had been lost with a total 23 vessels in the eastern Mediterranean.

Earlier on Monday, Israel’s foreign ministry posted on X ​that it “will not allow any breach of the lawful naval blockade on Gaza”.

In a video posted on Edhi’s official Facebook handle, Faisal said that at around 1pm today, “the Gaza aid flotilla was intercepted by Israeli forces near Cyprus and its members have been arrested, including Saad Edhi”.

He also appealed to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to take action following his son’s detention by Israeli forces.

“They were arrested in international waters and Israeli forces have no right to do so. Israel has arrested them illegally and their whereabouts are unknown,” he said.

He said that Saad, a Pakistani citizen, was part of the Gaza Sumud Flotilla and was going to help war-affected people in Gaza. He added that around 500 people from different countries were also part of it. “They were bringing food and medicines for the people of Gaza.”

“Now they have been arrested, we don’t know anything about their whereabouts,” he said, adding that their mobile phones had also been snatched.

“I appeal to Pakistan’s foreign ministry to take action, as a Pakistani citizen has been arrested by Israeli forces,” Faisal said.

He also appealed to the ministry to confer with the United Nations and the international community against this “illegal and inhuman conduct by Israeli forces” and to stop the “genocide in Gaza.”

Earlier today, his son also issued a video statement from the Gaza Sumud Flotilla.

“I am Saad Edhi, a Pakistani citizen. If you are watching this video, it means that I have been intercepted or am being intercepted,” he said.

He described it as a “non-violent humanitarian aid mission” for Gaza.

“We are bringing aid to Gaza peacefully. There has been a genocide in Gaza for the past eight decades. That’s why we want to end this illegal blockade and siege,” he said.

He further said: “We are going to Gaza, and if we are arrested by Israeli Occupation Forces or the Israeli Defence Forces, it is the responsibility of the Pakistani government to coordinate and make efforts to ensure my release.”

Ships from the ​Global Sumud Flotilla had set sail for a third time on Thursday from ⁠southern Turkey, after earlier attempts to deliver aid to Gaza were intercepted by Israel in international waters.

Live ​video showed military vessels approaching the vessels on Monday.

“Military vessels are currently intercepting our fleet and (Israeli) forces are ​boarding the first of our boats in broad daylight,” the Global Sumud Flotilla initially said on X.

“We demand safe passage for our legal, non-violent humanitarian mission.”

The group said there were two dozen Turks among those on the intercepted ​vessels, some 250 nautical miles (463 km) from Gaza. It said there were 426 people taking part in the flotilla from ‌39 ⁠countries.

Israel’s foreign ministry also called on “all participants in this provocation to change course and turn back immediately”.

The previous flotilla had departed from Spain on April 12. But Israeli forces intercepted vessels in that group, taking more than 100 pro-Palestinian activists to Crete and detaining two others in Israel.

Last October, Israel’s military halted another flotilla assembled by ​the same organisation, arresting Swedish ​activist Greta Thunberg ⁠and more than 450 participants.

Palestinians and international aid bodies, along with Turkey and a number of other countries, say supplies reaching Gaza are still insufficient, despite ​a ceasefire reached in October that included guarantees of increased aid.

Most of ​Gaza’s more than ⁠two million people have been displaced, many now living in bombed-out homes and makeshift tents pitched on open ground, roadsides, or atop the ruins of destroyed buildings.

Israel, which controls all access to the Gaza Strip, denies ⁠withholding supplies ​for its residents. Its foreign ministry claimed more than 1.58m tons of humanitarian aid and thousands of tons of medical supplies have entered Gaza since October 2025.

Opinion

Editorial

‘Talks over hostility’
Updated 02 Jul, 2026

‘Talks over hostility’

THE recent appeal endorsed by civil society members from Pakistan and India, urging the prime ministers of both...
Lahore tragedy
02 Jul, 2026

Lahore tragedy

THE death of 14 children in the roof collapse of a private tuition centre in Lahore has plunged the entire country...
Data policy
02 Jul, 2026

Data policy

THE draft ‘Data Governance Policy’, released by the IT ministry recently, is a welcome step towards modernising...
PIA’s privatisation
Updated 01 Jul, 2026

PIA’s privatisation

THE management control of PIA has finally been transferred to a consortium comprising private investors and the ...
Rights beyond rulings
01 Jul, 2026

Rights beyond rulings

THE Supreme Court’s recent ruling that jewellery, bridal gifts and dowry articles given to a bride remain her...
Asia left behind
01 Jul, 2026

Asia left behind

ALARMING regression has been witnessed in the Asian teams at the FIFA World Cup. A record nine representatives from...