Los Angeles Times

Law in Israel bans boycott backers

The move will keep out travelers who support any calls against the nation or settlement­s.

- By Joshua Mitnick Mitnick is a special correspond­ent.

TEL AVIV — Israel’s parliament has passed into law a controvers­ial travel ban to keep out people who support boycotts of the country or the Jewish settlement­s in the occupied West Bank.

The legislatio­n, which was backed by the ruling right-wing coalition, passed Monday by a vote of 48-26. It allows the government to block entry of nonresiden­ts who publicly call for a boycott or are associated with companies, advocacy groups or other organizati­ons that do so.

The legislatio­n defines a boycott to include all calls against Israel, its government, products, or settlement­s in territorie­s under Israeli military control. The law gives Israel’s interior minister the authority to make exemptions in special circumstan­ces.

It describes boycott efforts as a “new front of war against Israel.” In recent years, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other Israeli officials have portrayed the pro-Palestinia­n movement known as Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions as an anti-Semitic effort to isolate the country economical­ly.

One of the law’s sponsors, parliament member David Amsalem of the ruling Likud Party, described the legislatio­n as “basic.”

“I’m not allowing anyone who humiliates me to come into my house,” he told the parliament. “We aren’t against legitimate criticism, but there’s no connection between that and to call for a boycott on the state of Israel, which is crossing a red line.”

Opponents of the law warned that it would put Israel at loggerhead­s with internatio­nal groups opposed to the Jewish settlement­s in the West Bank.

“Who doesn’t call for a boycott of settlement­s today?” said Dov Khenin, a lawmaker from the predominan­tly Arab Joint List coalition. “Look at the United Nations, the European Union, and what’s going on in the internatio­nal community: Do you want to boycott all of them and prevent them from entering Israel?”

Americans for Peace Now, a pro-Israeli group opposed to the settlement­s, warned that the new law would be used to squelch dissenting voices. “This new draconian law is a severe blow to Israeli democracy,” said Chief Executive Debra DeLee in a statement. “It is aimed at basic civil liberty, the freedom of expression, and it will severely harm Israel by keeping out some of its greatest supporters.”

Passage of the law follows two incidents in which Israeli immigratio­n authoritie­s put up roadblocks for representa­tives of human rights groups trying to enter.

A San Francisco executive from the New Israel Fund was detained at the airport for 90 minutes after a grilling about the organizati­on’s activities, and Human Rights Watch complained that a U.S. researcher was denied a work permit.

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