Orlando Sentinel

Israel identifies 20 groups whose members it’s banning

- By Tia Goldenberg

JERUSALEM — Israel on Sunday identified 20 activist groups from around the world whose members will be banned from entering the country over their calls to boycott the Jewish state, stepping up its fight against a movement it views as a serious threat.

Israel last year enacted a law that would ban any activist who “knowingly issues a public call for boycotting Israel.” The list made public Sunday, which includes a Nobel Peace Prize winning organizati­on, follows up on that legislatio­n.

A statement by the Strategic Affairs Ministry said those who have carried out “significan­t, ongoing and consistent harm to Israel through advocating boycotts may be considered to have their entry barred.” It said “central figures in key boycott organizati­ons” risked being prevented entry. The 2017 law does not apply to Israeli citizens, the statement said.

“The boycott organizati­ons must know that the state of Israel will act against them,” Strategic Affairs Minister Gilad Erdan said in a statement. “The creation of this list is another step in our struggle against the incitement and lies of the boycott organizati­ons.”

The list is part of Israel’s efforts against a grass-roots movement known as BDS, which calls for boycotts, divestment and sanctions against Israel over its policies toward the Palestinia­ns. The movement has urged businesses, artists and universiti­es to sever ties with Israel, and it includes thousands of volunteers around the world.

Supporters of the movement say the tactics are a nonviolent way to promote the Palestinia­n cause. Israel says the campaign goes beyond fighting its occupation of territory Palestinia­ns claim for their state and often masks a more far-reaching aim to delegitimi­ze or destroy the Jewish state.

The listed groups, from the United States, France, South Africa and beyond, count thousands of people as members. They were chosen because they are the main ones who “operate consistent­ly and continuous­ly” against Israel, according to Erdan’s office.

American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker group on the list, said it would continue to work for “peace and justice.” The group, together with a British Quaker organizati­on, won a Nobel Peace Prize in 1947 for assisting World War II refugees.

“We answered the call for divestment from apartheid South Africa and we have done the same with the call for Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions from Palestinia­ns who have faced decades of human rights violations,” said Kerri Kennedy, an AFSC official responsibl­e for internatio­nal programs.

The U.S.-based Jewish Voice for Peace was also blackliste­d.

“Israel’s decision to specifical­ly ban JVP is disconcert­ing but not surprising, given the further erosion of democratic norms and rising anxiety about the power of BDS as a tool to demand freedom,” Jewish Voice for Peace wrote on Facebook in response to the decision.

 ?? BERNARD THOMAS/THE HERALD-SUN 2015 ?? People participat­e in a North Carolina gathering of Jewish Voice for Peace, one of the groups blackliste­d by Israel.
BERNARD THOMAS/THE HERALD-SUN 2015 People participat­e in a North Carolina gathering of Jewish Voice for Peace, one of the groups blackliste­d by Israel.

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