San Francisco Chronicle

206 companies have settlement ties, says U.N.

- By Jamey Keaten Jamey Keaten is an Associated Press writer.

GENEVA — The U.N. human rights office said Wednesday that 206 companies — mostly Israeli and American — are facing a review of their business practices involving Israeli settlement­s, which are considered illegal under internatio­nal law.

In a long-awaited report, the office said more resources were needed to handle the complex and unpreceden­ted task of compiling what some critics call an unfair “blacklist” and a sign of anti-Israel bias at the United Nations.

Proponents insist that companies must be held accountabl­e for their activities in the settlement­s, arguing that those actions can contribute to injustices against Palestinia­ns.

The 16-page report does not cite companies by name and says the rights office still has work to do.

The office said it had contacted 64 companies but it would not identify until all 206 companies had been contacted — and possibly not at all. Of those companies, 143 are based in Israel or the settlement­s, and 22 in the United States. Of the 19 other countries linked to such companies, Germany is home to seven and the Netherland­s to five.

Ultimately, the rights office’s review could lead to a public naming and shaming of companies for their activities linked to the settlement­s and give an U.N. imprimatur to efforts championed by the “BDS” movement (boycott, divest and sanction), which has been primarily a grassroots campaign to pressure Israel through action against companies.

“The violations of human rights associated with the settlement­s are pervasive and devastatin­g, reaching every facet of Palestinia­n life,” the report said, citing restrictio­ns on movement, freedom of religion, education and land ownership faced by Palestinia­ns in East Jerusalem and the West Bank. “Businesses play a central role in furthering the establishm­ent, maintenanc­e and expansion of Israeli settlement­s.”

Israel and the United States have been sharply critical of a resolution passed by the 47-member Human Rights Council in March 2016 that paved the way for the review — the first of its kind. The resolution called on the rights office to create “database” of companies found to engage in any of 10 activities, either explicitly linked to the settlement­s or supportive of them.

Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Danny Danon, criticized the timing of the report’s release, and vowed to fight the release of any “blacklist” of companies.

“On the day that the U.N. is marking Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, the UNHRC has chosen to publicize this informatio­n about the number of companies operating in Israel,” he said in a statement. “This is a shameful act which will serve as a stain on the UNHRC forever.

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