This article, originally published by Common Dreams on May 19, 2026 and shared under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) license, reports on U.S. sanctions announced by the Treasury Department targeting four activists involved in recent humanitarian flotillas that sought to reach Gaza.
Key points
– The U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) announced sanctions on four individuals it associated with the Popular Conference for Palestinians Abroad (PCPA) and flotilla activity. The Treasury said the move targets persons “associated with the pro‐Hamas flotilla” organized by the U.S.-designated PCPA and aims to disrupt what it described as Hamas’s global financial support networks.
– The four people named are:
– Saif Abu Keshek — a Palestinian with Spanish and Swedish citizenship and a PCPA leader who helped organize Global Sumud Flotilla (GSF) missions;
– Hisham Abdallah Sulayman Abu Mahfuz — PCPA president, based in Jordan;
– Mohammed Khatib — based in Belgium and identified as the European coordinator for the Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network;
– Jaldia Abubakra Aueda — Samidoun’s coordinator in Madrid.
– The sanctions freeze any U.S. assets the individuals may have and prohibit Americans and U.S. entities from conducting business with them.
Reactions and context
– Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the flotilla was an attempt to undermine the U.S. administration’s efforts toward peace and pledged continued action against what he called Hamas’s international support networks.
– Organizers and supporters of the flotillas, as well as multiple observers, dispute any proven link between the flotillas and Hamas. Samidoun condemned the sanctions and characterized them as part of a broader campaign against Palestinians, saying the measures coincided with Israeli interceptions of flotilla vessels and the detention of international activists at sea.
– The article notes that United Nations experts, several national governments, numerous human rights organizations, and other analysts have accused Israel of committing genocide, apartheid, colonization, occupation, and ethnic cleansing in relation to its actions in Gaza and the occupied territories. These are reported as allegations and positions expressed by those bodies and groups.
Broader policy background
– Since the October 7, 2023 Hamas-led attacks, the Biden and Trump administrations have provided Israel with substantial military and diplomatic support, including aid and Security Council vetoes related to Gaza ceasefire proposals. The piece cites an estimate that total U.S. financial support for Israel since 1948 approaches $300 billion in inflation‐adjusted dollars.
– The Trump administration’s actions since returning to office are described as increasingly aggressive toward pro‐Palestinian activists and organizations, drawing criticism from advocacy groups, academics, and some judges who say these moves threaten free speech, association, and academic freedom.
– Washington has previously sanctioned International Criminal Court (ICC) officials and independent U.N. expert Francesca Albanese; the latter’s sanctions were temporarily blocked by a federal judge who found she had “done nothing more than speak,” according to reporting cited in the article. Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich reportedly said the ICC was seeking his arrest and said he would “fight back,” including by advocating the removal of Palestinians from parts of the occupied West Bank, a statement that drew widespread attention.
– Advocacy voices quoted in coverage, such as Isabelle Hayslip of Democracy for the Arab World Now, warned that labeling Palestinians or their supporters as terrorists risks broadly chilling diaspora organizing and dissent.
This summary presents the article’s reporting on the sanctions, named individuals, official statements, responses from affected groups, and wider diplomatic and policy context.
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