San Francisco Chronicle

Prominent British boycott activist barred from entry

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JERUSALEM — Israel’s ministry of strategic affairs said Monday it denied a leading British boycott activist’s entry into the country.

Revital Yakin-Karkovsky, a senior ministry official, said Hugh Lanning of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign was prohibited Sunday from entering Israel because his organizati­on had close ties to the Hamas militant group and was one of the leading forces seeking to delegitimi­ze Israel.

Israel’s parliament recently passed a law barring entry to supporters of the boycott movement. The measure drew fierce criticism from dovish groups who condemned it as the latest in a series of steps to silence critics, and ministry officials struggled to explain how it would be enforced.

The boycott movement, also called the BDS movement, advocates boycotts, divestment and sanctions against Israel in what supporters say is a nonviolent way to promote the Palestinia­n struggle for independen­ce. It has urged businesses, artists and universiti­es to sever ties with Israel and includes thousands of volunteers around the world.

The new law barring BDS supporters has yet to take effect. Yakin-Karkovsky said it would take weeks to formulate and Lanning was barred based on existing policies.

“Whoever acts against Israel should understand that the rules of the game have changed. No sane country would allow entry to key boycott activists working to harm the country’s core interests and lead to its isolation,” said Gilad Erdan, the minister of strategic affairs.

Ben Jamal, the director of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, called Lanning the “first victim” of the new law.

“A democratic country does not behave in the way Israel is behaving,” he said.

Yakin-Karkovsky said it was reasonable for a country to refuse welcome to foreigners with a declared intent of underminin­g it strategica­lly and causing it harm. She pointed to a similar 1971 immigratio­n law in Britain that granted authoritie­s wide discretion to decline entry to, or expel foreigners when it relates to the “public interest” or security considerat­ions.

Israel says the boycott campaign goes beyond Israel’s occupation of lands claimed by the Palestinia­ns and masks a deeper aim of delegitimi­zing or even destroying the country.

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