Try GOLD - Free
Israel: Imprisonment made policy
Mail & Guardian
|M&G 10 October 2025
Treatment of flotilla participants echoes Palestinian experience
Unbowed: The South Africans who participated in the Global Sumud Flotilla, who were detained briefly by Israel, at a press conference after their arrival in Johannesburg on Wednesday. Photo: Global Sumud Flotilla
(Global Sumud Flotilla)
Israel’s prison network has become the backbone of its occupation, a machinery that turns confinement into governance and makes humiliation routine.
New evidence from Palestinian legal organisations, together with testimony from South Africans briefly detained after joining the Global Sumud Flotilla, shows how imprisonment functions not as punishment but as policy.
The flotilla, a multinational civilian convoy carrying humanitarian aid to Gaza, was intercepted by Israeli forces in international waters on 1 and 2 October. More than 450 participants from 44 countries were detained.
Among them were six South Africans who were later released and deported via Jordan.
Fatima Hendricks, Zaheera Soomar, Zukiswa Wanner, Reaaz Moola, Carrie Shelver and Nelson Mandela’s grandson, Mandla Mandela, returned to South Africa on Wednesday. Their accounts mirror conditions Palestinians have endured for decades.
The Adalah Legal Centre, which coordinated legal representation for most of the detainees, said they were blindfolded, denied legal counsel and treated as “illegal entrants”, despite being seized outside Israeli territorial waters.
“They were forced to enter Israel,” lawyer Lubna Tuma said.
Adalah argues Israel’s use of domestic immigration law in these circumstances breaches international maritime and humanitarian law, the same legal elasticity that allows occupation to pass as administration.
A fact sheet released on 7 October by the Palestinian Prisoner's Society, Addameer and the Commission of Detainees’ Affairs places these incidents in scale.
This story is from the M&G 10 October 2025 edition of Mail & Guardian.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Mail & Guardian
Mail & Guardian
Illegal dumping poisons Joburg
Grey skyline as illegal waste fires burn waste, debris, toxic materials
5 mins
M&G 28 November 2025
Mail & Guardian
Cat Matlala, Cele and the R500 000
Matlala claims he paid Bheki Cele and Senzo Mchunu for police favours and protection
4 mins
M&G 28 November 2025
Mail & Guardian
SA shrugs off Trump theatrics post G20
South Africa's risk is not expulsion, which the G20's rules do not allow, but a year of disruption that could blunt the gains of its presidency
6 mins
M&G 28 November 2025
Mail & Guardian
What happens to those who can read for meaning?
Much attention is paid to the 81% of South Africa's Grade 4s who cannot read for meaning. Leanne Kelly considers the stories of those from the 'other 19%'
3 mins
M&G 28 November 2025
Mail & Guardian
PHEV that set the revolution in motion
BYD SEALION G
5 mins
M&G 28 November 2025
Mail & Guardian
Confronting our innate perceptions to tackle gender-based violence
Three in five women experience verbal, physical, and/or sexual abuse in their lifetime
5 mins
M&G 28 November 2025
Mail & Guardian
'Positive Masculinity' changing the game in Africa
\"Where do you learn to be a man?\" That's the question 24-year-old Nkosikhona Fakudze is grappling with in eSwatini, as he navigates his relationship with his girlfriend and daily life while his father is away as a migrant worker.
3 mins
M&G 28 November 2025
Mail & Guardian
Selling city real estate deserves careful debate
Cape Town's plan to auction two of its public assets forces us to ask what kind of city we want to build
4 mins
M&G 28 November 2025
Mail & Guardian
Training tomorrow's stars
From advanced actor training to AI-driven film studies, new academies are giving South African creatives the tools to thrive in a shifting global industry
3 mins
M&G 28 November 2025
Mail & Guardian
South Africa's G20 coup de grâce
This was Johannesburg's moment on the world stage.
5 mins
M&G 28 November 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

