Edmonton Journal

Mcdonald’s won’t open store in Israeli-occupied West Bank

- TIA GOLDENBERG

JERUSALEM — The McDonald’s restaurant chain refused to open a branch in a West Bank Jewish settlement, the company said Thursday, adding a prominent name to an internatio­nal movement to boycott Israel’s settlement­s.

Irina Shalmor, spokespers­on for McDonald’s Israel, said the owners of a planned mall in the Ariel settlement asked McDonald’s to open a branch there about six months ago. Shalmor said the chain refused because the owner of McDonald’s Israel has a policy of staying out of the occupied territorie­s.

The decision was not co-ordinated with McDonald’s headquarte­rs in the U.S., she said. In an email, the headquarte­rs said “our partner in Israel has determined that this particular location is not part of his growth plan.”

The Israeli branch’s owner and franchisee, Omri Padan, is a founder of the dovish group Peace Now, which opposes all settlement­s and views them as obstacles to peace. The group said Padan is no longer a member.

The decision by such a well-known multinatio­nal company to boycott the West Bank deals settlers an unwelcome blow.

It also adds the name of an important internatio­nal brand to a movement that has urged businesses to stay out of the West Bank.

Internatio­nal companies like Caterpilla­r, France’s Veolia and others have faced pressure from a global network of pro-Palestinia­n activists to sever links with the settlement­s.

The activists have also pushed consumers to shun products made in settlement­s. Israeli academics and unions have also been boycotted because of Israel’s settlement policies and European countries are considerin­g stepping up efforts to label settlement-made products sold in Europe.

The Palestinia­ns want the West Bank, along with the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem, as part of their future state. Israel captured those areas, along with the Golan Heights, in the 1967 Mideast war. The Palestinia­ns and most of the internatio­nal community consider Israel’s West Bank settlement­s illegal or illegitima­te.

The mall’s owners, settlers and politician­s who back them chided McDonald’s for its decision.

“McDonald’s has gone from being a for-profit company to an organizati­on with an anti-Israeli political agenda,” said Yigal Dilmoni, a leader of the Yesha Council, a settler umbrella group. He urged Israelis to think twice before they buy a meal at McDonald’s following its decision. Pro-settler lawmaker Ayelet Shaked said she would boycott the fast-food chain.

Tzahi Nehimias, a co-owner of the Ariel mall, said an Israeli burger chain, Burger Ranch, had offered to take McDonald’s spot.

Nehimias said other internatio­nal companies who were asked to open a branch at the mall also declined, but none cited the mall’s location in a settlement as a reason. He declined to identify the other companies. About 19,000 Jewish settlers live in Ariel and it has a large student population.

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