Google – AFP, Steve Weizman (AFP), 31 January 2014
![]() |
Entrance of
the Israeli SodaStream factory in the Mishor Adumim industrial
park, next to
the West Bank settlement of Maale Adumim on January 30,
2014 (AFP, Manahem
Kahana)
|
Jerusalem —
Israeli government and business leaders are alarmed by a growing international
boycott movement and the likely effect of EU measures against exports from
Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank.
Cabinet
ministers are to meet next week to hammer out a strategy against a growing
international campaign to boycott trade linked to settlements, Haaretz
newspaper reported Friday.
And a group
of top Israeli businesspeople has launched a publicity campaign urging Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to make peace with the Palestinians for the sake of
the economy.
![]() |
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
at the 7th Annual International Conference
in
Tel Aviv on January 28, 2014 (AFP/File,
Jack Guez)
|
These
incidents highlight the creeping success of a campaign to boycott trade linked
to settlements built on Palestinian land seized during the Six Day War of 1967,
and viewed by the international community as illegal.
Meanwhile,
the European Union recently moved to block all grants and funding to any
Israeli entity operating beyond the 1967 lines, sparking growing alarm in
Israel.
Lars
Faaborg-Andersen, the EU's ambassador to Israel, told AFP last week that, in
addition to coordinated action by the body, Israel's constant settlement
construction was fuelling private moves to boycott products and services linked
to the settlements.
He said
initiatives in Europe to require separate labelling for goods manufactured in
the settlements were gathering pace every time Israel announced a new round of
construction.
Israeli
Finance Minister Yair Lapid warned Wednesday that the breakdown of current
peace talks with the Palestinians could strengthen the boycott, divestment and
sanctions (BDS) movement and deal a body blow to the economy.
Israel is a
country dependent on exports, with 33 percent of its foreign trade conducted
with the European Union, he told a security conference.
"Europe
is our primary market," he said. "Even a 20 percent fall in our trade
with Europe would mean 9,800 workers being fired immediately," he said.
"Even
a partial European boycott would be felt by every Israeli, and the cost of
living would go up," he added.
"Exports
will drop by some 20 billion shekels ($5.7 billion/ 4.2 billion euros)
annually; GDP will drop some 11 billion shekels," he said.
Last May,
the Palestine Liberation Organisation published an estimate of EU imports of
goods produced on settlements, which it put at 229 million euros a year.
'Pain in
the ass': SodaStream CEO
While some
Israeli companies set up in occupied territory to take advance of tax breaks,
low rents and soft loans, others do so for ideological reasons, believing in
the Jewish religious imperative to settle the biblical land.
SodaStream,
the home soft-drink machine maker that hired Johansson this month, says it
hadn't chosen to set up in Maale Adumim settlement, east of Jerusalem, but
simply inherited the facility when it acquired the business in 2007.
![]() |
Israeli
SodaStream factory on January 30, 2014 (AFP, Menahem Kahana)
|
In fact,
CEO Daniel Birnbaum told New York Jewish weekly The Forward the plant's
location was "a pain in the ass."
But he
added: "We will not throw our employees under the bus to promote anyone?s
political agenda," saying he "just can?t see how it would help the
cause of the Palestinians if we fired them."
Senior
executive Yonah Lloyd told the Jerusalem Post that would mean making 800 Palestinians
and 500 Israelis jobless.
Commenting
in Haaretz, Egyptian-Belgian journalist Khaled Diab said that while boycotts
could change the behaviour of commercial enterprises they were unlikely to
change state policy.
The film
"'Lost in Translation' brought Scarlett Johansson global fame. Will the
actress's latest role -- lost in the occupation -- earn her widespread
infamy," he asked.
"Even
at the height of anti-apartheid sanctions, South Africa managed to find
'sanctions-busting' alternatives, and began a process of recalibrating its
economy and finding alternative trading partners."
"In
addition, sanctions had some unintended consequences," he added. "For
instance, it forced the country to innovate more, such as developing
alternative energy technologies."
"Like
with South Africa, the United States should end its military aid to Israel
until it ends the occupation, which might possibly be the single most effective
economic action any party can take to end the occupation."
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