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Politics : World Affairs Discussion

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To: GUSTAVE JAEGER who wrote (63)7/6/2002 9:06:03 AM
From: ChinuSFO   of 3959
 
Gus, sometimes the situation can be taken too far such as labelling of food etc. Whoever thinks that it is going to be more effective this way, is not thinking straight.

Israel stung by imports ruling

Suzanne Goldenberg in Jerusalem
Saturday July 6, 2002
The Guardian

British supermarkets have been told that they must clearly identify produce on sale from the illegal Jewish settlements of the West Bank and Gaza.
The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said yesterday that it told importers last week that cherry tomatoes, baby potatoes, avocados, fruit juice and flowers grown in the illegal outposts could no longer be sold under the "Produce of Israel" label.

"Supermarket customers over here raised questions about produce with supermarkets, who raised it with us," it said.

"Produce from these occupied territories ought not to be labelled 'Produce of Israel', because the territories are not recognised as part of Israel."

The directive is largely symbolic. The value of exports from the settlements to the whole of the EU amounts to €20m (£13m) .

Nevertheless, the decision has dismayed the Israeli authorities, because it comes at a time of increasing sensitivity about Israel's isolation in the international community.

As far as Israel is concerned, the Palestinian uprising is a war of words as much as of weapons, and there is deep unease about the boycott of Israeli academics and goods from Israel proper by Palestinian solidarity campaigners in Britain.

The foreign ministry said Israel was still considering its response. But the newspaper Ha'aretz reported that embassy officials were stunned by the directive and had complained that it was unfair and discriminatory.

Israeli peace activists, who have urged their fellow citizens to boycott settlement produce, welcomed the directive.

"This is a very important step because this, in fact, is the crux of the issue," said Adam Keller, of Gush Shalom.

"The issue is very simple: are these territories inside Israel, or are they not part of Israel?"

The EU has stiffened its rules of origin, which means goods from the settlements will be subject to customs duty, unlike exports from Israel proper.

guardian.co.uk
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