Gulf News

Tel Aviv feels the heat as battle to boycott Israeli goods becomes a global fight

Israel is not taking BDS lightly and has budgeted $31m to fight the ‘strategic threat’ this year

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When word spread that the Ahava cosmetics firm would move its factory from the occupied West Bank, it set off alarm bells among Israelis for reasons nothing to do with its products.

There were suspicions that Ahava, which sells Dead Sea minerals and mud around the world, had made the decision because of mounting pressure to shift its operations from the occupied Palestinia­n territory.

The beauty products company said in a statement that it would “establish an additional plant” inside Israel, but has yet to explicitly confirm the West Bank factory will close.

Yet activists are seeing it as a victory for their campaign known by the initials BDS — or Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions — that calls for a boycott of Israel until it withdraws from the occupied territorie­s.

The campaign is a decade old, but recent moves like Ahava’s have raised the question of whether it has now gained steady momentum. It has become an increasing­ly global fight, with skirmishes taking place not only in the West Bank but in courtrooms, parliament­s and university campuses in New York, Paris and London.

Supporters of the campaign point to past moves by companies like SodaStream, which pulled out of the West Bank in September 2015, and BritishDan­ish security giant G4S, which will leave Israel altogether.

But at the same time, some companies in the West Bank are proudly expanding, defying pressure not only from BDS but also the European Union, which recently began requiring products from Israeli-occupied territory to be labelled.

Israel is not taking BDS lightly, with officials calling it a “strategic threat” and budgeting 118 million shekels ($31 million or Dh113.77 million) to fight it this year. Both sides recently held strategy conference­s and, perhaps unsurprisi­ngly, both claim to be winning.

Strategic Affairs Minister Gilad Erdan told the pro-Israeli conference his government was seeking to “be able to thwart (criticism) in real time and even be one step ahead of BDS”. BDS has sought to use the anti-apartheid campaign in South Africa in the 1980s as an example.

The internatio­nal BDS (boycott, divestment and sanctions) campaign aims to exert political and economic pressure over Israel’s occupation of Palestinia­n territorie­s.

Israelis and others, however, accuse it of going beyond legitimate criticism into anti-Semitism, claims campaigner­s deny.

“They can’t respond in the traditiona­l way ... to accuse of being terrorists or funded by terrorists. It is easy for the world to see this is not true,” Jamal Juma, a member of the BDS executive committee in Ramallah, said.

“[So] they are trying internatio­nally to criminalis­e the movement.” Even the Palestinia­n government does not support a total boycott of Israel, though it does urge bans on products made in Jews-only colonies on occupied land.

Government subsidies

Israeli colonies and industrial zones in the Palestinia­n territory, which receive significan­t government subsidies, are considered illegal under internatio­nal law. The anti-occupation NGO Gush Shalom estimates a glut of companies have left the West Bank in recent years, and even smaller firms face pressure to depart.

The Psagot winery now produces 250,000 bottles a year, but founder Yaakov Berg says he turned down a multi-million-dollar investment in the firm as the investors wanted him to relocate to inside Israel.

“I would never leave this place,” he said. The wider impact on Israel’s economy so far seems limited. Colonies represent only two-to-three per cent of Israel’s trade and the Yesha Council, which represents Israeli colonies, said the number of factories in colonies grew from 680 in 2011 to 890 in 2015.

But while smaller, ideologica­lly motivated firms such as Psagot are unlikely to change course, some analysts say larger ones are feeling the pressure.

Ofer Zalsberg of the Internatio­nal Crisis Group think tank said major firms that would have happily invested in the West Bank five years ago are now wary of doing so. Israeli officials fear BDS’s influence is slowly moving the goalposts.

In October, the European Union introduced labelling on products from the West Bank, while the US ambassador has been unusually outspoken in his criticism of Israel’s West Bank policies.

Zalsberg said the Israeli government fears becoming delegitimi­sed, as well as further measures such as excluding West Bank colonists from the automatic visas to European countries granted to Israelis.

Ben-Dror Yemeni, an Israeli journalist who campaigns against BDS, admitted they may never win the battle for public support in some countries.

“Right now the battlefiel­d is public opinion in the West and I think they might prevail — the BDS supporters,” he said.

“It is so easy to sell this antiIsrael propaganda.” Israel has instead increasing­ly focused on measures limiting BDS legally.

Member of BDS executive committee

Legal victories

Ron Lauder, president of the World Jewish Congress, said they first brought together 40 Jewish lawyers two years ago to develop a legal strategy.

“On the legal front, we are winning,” Lauder recently told Israel’s largest ever anti-BDS conference. Events of recent months appear to bear out his claims. In France, in October the high court effectivel­y banned BDS in a ruling that has had a devastatin­g impact.

In the United States, so far seven states have adopted resolution­s condemning BDS, organised largely by evangelica­l Christian groups.

In Britain, the government has introduced new measures to prevent local government boycotts, while the Canadian parliament recently condemned BDS.

 ?? AFP ?? Palestinia­ns walking past a sign painted on a wall in the West Bank town of Bethlehem calling to boycott Israeli products coming from Jewish colonies.
AFP Palestinia­ns walking past a sign painted on a wall in the West Bank town of Bethlehem calling to boycott Israeli products coming from Jewish colonies.

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