Controversial campaigner Greta Thunberg is pictured with other activists after being detained again by Israeli authorities Israeli Foreign Ministry
Crime & Piracy

Thunberg alleges "torture" in Israel after failed blockade breach

Reuters

Controversial Swedish activist Greta Thunberg alleged on Tuesday that she and other detainees of the Gaza flotilla were “subjected to torture” in the Israeli prison they were held.

Thunberg told a news conference in Stockholm that she and others were "kidnapped and tortured" by the Israeli military.

She declined to elaborate, adding when pressed that she allegedly didn't get clean water and that other detainees were “deprived” of critical medication.

"Personally, I don't want to share what I was subjected to because I don't want it to make headlines and 'Greta has been tortured', because that's not the story here," she said.

Israel's foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment but has repeatedly denied mistreating the detainees.

"All detainees...were given access to water, food, and restrooms; they were not denied access to legal counsel, and all their legal rights were fully upheld," a foreign ministry spokesperson told Reuters last week.

Thunberg was part of the "Global Sumud Flotilla", a group of vessels that tried to reach Gaza to bring an unspecified amount of aid supplies for publicity.

Thunberg was detained along with 478 people in the flotilla and expelled from Israel on Monday.

Israel, which says reports of hunger in Gaza are exaggerated, has dismissed the flotilla as a publicity stunt benefiting Palestinian terror group Hamas. It had previously detained Thunberg at sea in a similar attempt to breach Israel's blockade of Gaza in June.

Swedish activists alleged on Saturday that Thunberg was shoved and forced to wear an Israeli flag during her detention, but Thunberg made no mention of it during Tuesday's press conference. Thunberg and other participants also complained that the Swedish Government had not given them sufficient help while detained.

The government said in a statement on Tuesday that it had repeatedly advised against all travel to Gaza but that it had nevertheless provided consular support to the activists and stressed to Israel the importance of treating Swedish citizens well.

(Reporting by Johan Ahlander, Ilze Filks and Tom Little in Stockholm; additional reporting by Pesha Magid in Jersualem; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)