ON
← Back to feed
United KingdomHealth17 days ago

Gaza-bound land convoy forced to abandon mission after arrests in Libya

A land convoy aiming to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza was forced to abandon its mission after facing obstruction, violence, and arrests in eastern Libya. The convoy became stuck due to Libyan militias refusing to allow passage through a checkpoint near Sirte. Ten members of a negotiating delegation were detained and taken to an unknown location, while another volunteer had previously been arrested near the Tunisian-Libyan border. The convoy faced further attacks from militias, leading to the destruction of their camp.

Volunteers remain detained in Libya after a bid to deliver aid to Gaza by land collapsed amid violence and obstruction

People wave flags of Turkiye, Palestine, Morocco as Global Sumud Flotilla convoy, which hoped to break the blockade on Gaza and deliver humanitarian aid. Stringer/Anadolu via Getty Images

Published:

June 04, 2026, 2:35 pm

A land convoy attempting to deliver aid to Gaza has been forced to abandon its mission after days of escalating obstruction, violence and arrests in eastern Libya.

The news comes two weeks after openDemocracy reported on how the convoy had become trapped by the refusal of Libyan militias to allow their passage through a checkpoint near Sirte, as they attempted to continue east towards Egypt.

Days after our article was published, ten members of a negotiating delegation approached a nearby checkpoint to discuss safe passage for the humanitarian mission. They were forced into unmarked white vans, taken to an unknown location and cut off from communication, according to Global Sumud. A further volunteer, 24-year-old Tunisian technical team member Mehdi Bouzguenda, had already been detained five days earlier while attempting to return home near the Tunisian-Libyan border.

“After our comrades were detained, we were attacked by two Libyan militias and our camp was destroyed,” South African writer and convoy participant Jessica Breakey told openDemocracy this week. “They escorted us all the way back to Tripoli.”

Global Sumud said unmarked vehicles began surrounding the convoy, where more than 200 participants were encamped, on the night of 25 May. Participants were forced to evacuate, and some men and women were physically assaulted.

Most international and Maghreb participants are now home and safe, Breakey said, but the detained volunteers from the negotiating team remain in custody. Global Sumud confirmed that 11 civilian volunteers – five Europeans, three people from Latin America, one from the US and two from Tunisia – remain detained in Libya as of 3 June.

The ten negotiators were brought before the attorney general in the Libyan city of Benghazi on 2 June, after more than seven days without seeing a judge or prosecutor. Their detention was extended for another ten days. Global Sumud says the volunteers have been denied legal counsel, subjected to severed communications and psychological pressure, and that some were forced to sign statements in Arabic without interpretation.

The convoy’s forced retreat marks the collapse of one of the most ambitious attempts to reach Gaza by land since the current assault began. Its organisers say they were carrying medical and humanitarian supplies for a population under siege. Instead, the mission ended with its camp destroyed, its participants dispersed, and 11 volunteers still detained in eastern Libya.

While attacks on and interceptions of Gaza-bound boats in the Mediterranean have drawn wider international attention, the overland route has also been violently blocked. Global Sumud says its land convoy included around 230 participants from 21 countries, carrying ambulances, medicine and mobile homes. An earlier statement said the convoy included seven ambulances, 20 mobile homes and ten aid trucks with supplies intended for Gaza’s besieged civilian population.

Nandini Naira Archer

Nandini is Social Movements Editor at openDemocracy. She leads the  How We Did It  series, spotlighting movement wins, and is also convening cross-generational activist conversations – bringing organisers from different contexts and moments into dialogue to exchange what’s working, what’s shifting and what others can learn. The aim is to move beyond storytelling towards  media for movements  in practice. If you have interesting wins, ideas, organisers or movements we should be speaking to, feel free to reach her at  nandini.archer@opendemocracy.net

All articles

More from Nandini Naira Archer

See all

Read the full article at openDemocracy
Source document: Global Sumud Flotilla convoy

1 reports

openDemocracyIndependentCenter17 days ago
Gaza-bound land convoy forced to abandon mission after arrests in Libya

A land convoy aiming to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza was forced to abandon its mission after facing obstruction, violence, and arrests in eastern Libya. The convoy became stuck due to Libyan militias refusing to allow passage through a checkpoint near Sirte. Ten members of a negotiating delegation were detained and taken to an unknown location, while another volunteer had previously been arrested near the Tunisian-Libyan border. The convoy faced further attacks from militias, leading to the destruction of their camp.

Bias read (Center): The article reports on events without overtly favoring any political side. It describes the situation objectively, citing the experiences of volunteers and the actions of Libyan militias without using biased language or selectively presenting information.

Official sources cited

  • organisation Global Sumud Flotilla convoy
  • press release Jessica Breakey

Go to the primary sources (2)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • organisationGlobal Sumud Flotilla convoy
  • press_releaseJessica Breakey