The flotilla included four Scots, captured in international waters

On the evening of October 2, 2025, concurrent protests broke out across Glasgow, showing support for the Global Sumud Flotilla (GSF). The GSF is the most recent of the 8 attempts since 2015 of the Freedom Flotilla Coalition to sail vital aid into a besieged Gaza, which has recently been classified as suffering a ‘Phase 5 Famine’ by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC). 

This famine is a continued effort by Israel to carry out genocide in Gaza against the Palestinian population. The flotilla comprised forty-four vessels, carrying 461 people from over fifty nations. Mostly activists, amongst the now kidnapped humanitarians, is the 22-year-old Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg. The flotilla, which was carrying desperately-needed food and medicine, was intercepted by the Israeli Defense Forces for ‘approaching an active combat zone and violating a lawful naval blockade’ and deeming them ‘provocation yachts’. 

World leaders, international activists, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, and the Secretary General of Amnesty International have all variously called the blockade illegal, demanding that it be lifted to allow humanitarian aid to pass.

The lawyers, activists, politicians, and celebrities aboard the flotilla included four Scots: Sid Khan, Yvonne Ridley, Margaret Pancetta, and Jim Hickey. Hickey and Khan are Glasgow locals. The morning after the kidnapping, Scottish Parliament Green Party co-leader Ross Greer called on First Minister John Swinney to commit Scotland to the boycott of Israel and demand the release of the Scottish hostages, including Greer’s constituent Sid Khan. 

In connection with other international movements and in solidarity with fellow citizens, protests were quickly organized by multiple organizations throughout Glasgow on 2nd October. One was held at Nelson Mandela Place and another at the Buchanan Street Steps. Protestors also took to Instagram to publicize a significant protest inside Glasgow Central train station with participants from Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign, Women for Palestine, and Glasgow Stop the War.

Protestors held signs calling for the end of the starvation of Gaza, a permanent ceasefire and various Palestinian and Scottish flags. Sid Khan’s wife, Isma Khan, spoke at the protest at Glasgow Central. Speaking for her husband after he was kidnapped, she encouraged the protestors to ‘continue doing their hard work’ and know that ‘the mission is complete because we have opened the eyes of the world to Gaza’.

Three of the Scottish fleet members, Ridley, Hickey, and Khan, have since been deported from Israeli prison holding to Jordan, while Margaret Pancetta was returned to Glasgow on October 6. Pancetta confirmed claims by other flotilla activists of human rights abuses in Israeli detention. As of the evening of October 7th, 138 members of the flotilla remained in Israel, with 40 on confirmed hunger strike.

The flotilla has since gained traction in the media internationally, and protests are likely to continue. On 7th October, a protest was held by the Stop the War Coalition on Library Hill to recognize two years of ongoing genocide.

A similar student protest took place in Edinburgh, which blocked Marble Arch. The flotilla represents the newest development in continued student resistance to Israeli occupation and aggression in Gaza.