The News (New Glasgow)

Israel races to head off UN settlement ‘blacklist’

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Weeks ahead of the expected completion of a UN database of companies that operate in Israel’s West Bank settlement­s, Israel and the Trump Administra­tion are working feverishly to prevent its publicatio­n.

While Israel is usually quick to brush off UN criticism, officials say they are taking the so-called “blacklist” seriously, fearing its publicatio­n could have devastatin­g consequenc­es by driving companies away, deterring others from coming and prompting investors to dump shares of Israeli firms. Dozens of major Israeli companies, as well as multinatio­nals that do business in Israel, are expected to appear on the list.

“We will do everything we can to ensure that this list does not see the light of day,” Israel’s UN ambassador, Danny Danon, told The Associated Press.

The UN’s top human rights body, the Human Rights Council, ordered the compilatio­n of the database in March 2016, calling on UN rights chief Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein to “investigat­e the implicatio­ns of the Israeli settlement­s on Palestinia­ns.”

The internatio­nal community overwhelmi­ngly considers the settlement­s, built on occupied land claimed by the Palestinia­ns for a future state, to be illegal. Israel rejects such claims, citing the land’s strategic and religious significan­ce, and says the matter should be resolved in negotiatio­ns.

Israeli officials say that about 100 local companies that operate in the West Bank and east Jerusalem have received warning letters that they will be on the list. In addition, some 50 internatio­nal companies, mostly American and European, also have been warned.

The companies have not been publicly identified, but one official said they include Israeli banks, supermarke­ts, restaurant chains, bus lines and security firms, as well as internatio­nal giants that provide equipment or services used to build or maintain settlement­s. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the matter with the media.

The only company to confirm receiving a warning letter has been Bezeq, Israel’s national telephone company. Bezeq’s chief executive, Stella Handler, posted a copy of the letter sent by Zeid’s office in September on her Facebook page. It accused Bezeq of using West Bank land for infrastruc­ture, providing phone and Internet services to settlement­s and operating sales offices in the West Bank and east Jerusalem.

Handler angrily wrote that Bezeq provides service to all customers, regardless of race or where they live.

“The council’s bias against Israel is so extreme that it has lost all relevance in the world,” she wrote. “We will not co-operate with a move that is all in all antiIsrael­i propaganda.”

But hours later, Handler removed the post, saying she had done so at the request of the government. The Israeli official confirmed the government has asked companies not to speak about the issue. Bezeq declined comment.

Israel has long accused the United Nations, and particular­ly the rights council, of being biased against it.

Israel is the only country that faces an examinatio­n of its rights record at each of the council’s three sessions each year. Some 70 resolution­s, or about quarter of the council’s country-specific resolution­s, have been aimed at Israel. That is nearly triple the number for the second-place country: Syria, where hundreds of thousands have been killed in a devastatin­g six-year civil war.

Israeli leaders and many nongovernm­ental groups also complain that some of the world’s worst violators of human rights, including Venezuela, Saudi Arabia, Congo and Cuba, sit on the council.

Some Western diplomats have said the database could set a harmful precedent by blurring the line between business and human rights on issues that are better left to trade policy than the Geneva council.

Israel seems to have little leverage over the council. But its campaign has received a big boost from the United States. The Trump administra­tion has taken a tough line against the UN, demanding reforms and in October, withdrawin­g from the cultural agency UNESCO because of alleged anti-Israel bias.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? The West Bank Jewish settlement of Ariel Weeks
AP PHOTO The West Bank Jewish settlement of Ariel Weeks

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