Ottawa is facing pressure over how far the country is willing to go diplomatically in response to the Canadian flotilla activists in Gaza being detained – leaving uncertainty on the future between Canada's and Israel's relationship. (Image Credit: Global BC)
Gaza Flotilla Activism

After the Gaza flotilla: Activists demand accountability as pressure mounts on Ottawa

Jun 1, 2026 | 4:43 PM

VANCOUVER — Former Kamloops resident Sebastian Tow says the mission may be over, but the political fallout surrounding the Gaza flotilla is only beginning.


Tow returned to Canada this week after being detained by Israeli forces during an international aid mission attempting to challenge Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza.

The flotilla, made up of hundreds of international activists, was intercepted in international waters before it could reach Gaza with humanitarian aid.

Tow alleges activists aboard the ships were beaten, tasered and psychologically tortured during detention aboard Israeli prison vessels, before being freed just four days later.

“It was four days of systematic torture,” Tow said in an interview following his return to Canada.

Israeli prison officials have denied allegations of abuse, but the claims have already triggered political reaction in Ottawa.

Prime Minister Mark Carney described the reported treatment of the detained Canadians as “abominable,” while Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand called for an independent investigation into the incident.

Dr. Saira Bano, a political scientist at Thompson Rivers University, says while the activists’ return may have ended the immediate crisis, the diplomatic consequences are only beginning to unfold.

Bano says pressure is now mounting on the federal government over Canada’s broader relationship with Israel, including calls for sanctions, military embargoes and stronger diplomatic action.

“This is not something Ottawa can quietly push aside given the seriousness of the allegations and the growing domestic scrutiny surrounding the case,” Bano said in a statement sent to CFJC News over the weekend (May 31).

Tow says activists involved in the flotilla mission plan to continue organizing demonstrations and attempt to pursue legal action following the interception and detention.

“We’re going to continue to pressure the Canadian government… to put a full arms embargo on the Israeli occupation,” Tow said.

Bano says situations like this are often handled quietly through negotiations between governments and international allies, but warns tensions surrounding the incident are unlikely to fade away quickly.

Meanwhile, Tow says the movement behind the flotilla mission will continue despite the detention.

“The flotilla proved to me that civilian movements are always ten steps ahead of institutions,” he said.

As calls for investigations and sanctions continue to grow, Ottawa now faces the mounting pressure over how far Canada is willing to go diplomatically, and whether the fallout from the flotilla mission could become a turning point in Canada’s relationship with Israel.