The Jerusalem Post

Lapid working to resolve Ben & Jerry’s Israel issue

- • By GIL HOFFMAN

Foreign Minister Yair Lapid is working behind the scenes to enable Ben & Jerry’s Israel to continue to abide by Isarel’s anti-boycott regulation­s, The Jerusalem Post learned on Tuesday.

Ben & Jerry’s Israel licensee Avi Zinger has been fighting Ben & Jerry’s in the US and its parent company Unilever Global for their decision to end their licensing agreement in Israel due to his refusal to break Israeli law and stop selling over the pre-1967 border. The effort is being fought on multiple diplomatic, legal and legislativ­e fronts.

Senior sources close to

Lapid said there are things happening on the issue that they cannot yet disclose and they hope that picture will soon become clear.

Justice Minister Gideon Sa’ar (New Hope) took a step in February to allow Israel to take action against Ben & Jerry’s in the US and Unilever Global. In coordinati­on with Finance Minister Avigdor Liberman, Sa’ar authorized anti-boycott regulation­s against companies that harm Israel.

“The State of Israel must fight against attempts to boycott us, which are part of a larger strategy of delegitimi­zing the Jewish state,” Sa’ar said at the time.

The Boycott Law, passed by the Knesset in 2011, enacts immediate sanctions on a boycotting company or organizati­on. But Sa’ar’s decision to implement the law in the case of Ben & Jerry’s required the approval of the Knesset’s Law and Constituti­on Committee.

The committee met on the issue in March at the request of five MKs from New Hope, Likud, Shas and United Torah Judaism. But the legislator­s were disappoint­ed that the meeting ended without a vote, even though they had a majority.

The MKs wrote committee chairman Rabbi Gilad Kariv (Labor) last week, complainin­g that no follow-up meeting had been set and accusing him of giving in to pressure from left-wing groups that oppose the anti-boycott regulation­s. They warned Kariv that action must be taken immediatel­y to prevent the Israeli factory in Be’er Tuviya from closing and its employees from losing their jobs.

Sources close to Kariv said a follow-up meeting and vote would take place next month. They said the reason for the delay was that the Foreign Ministry had asked Kariv for more time to consider the issue.

Officials in the Foreign Ministry said Lapid was handling the issue himself and there would soon be news on the matter.

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