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We provide links to articles we think will be of interest to our supporters, informing them of issues, events, debates and the wider context of the conflict. We are sympathetic to much of the content of what we post, but not to everything. The fact that something has been linked to here does not necessarily mean that we endorse the views expressed in it.
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Human-rights observers wanted


The Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme in Palestine & Israel (EAPPI) provides protection by presence, monitors human rights abuses, supports Israeli and Palestinian peace activists and advocates for an end to the occupation.
Apply to be a volunteer - closing date 21st June 2013.

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Did you know?


Police impunity
After their own investigations establishing a prima facie violation, Btselem has lodged over 280 complaints of alleged police violence in the oPt since the start of the second Intifada: "we are aware of only 12 indictments" Btselem April 2013
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Runners in the first ever Bethlehem Marathon were forced to run two laps of the same course on Sunday 21 April 2013, as Palestinians were unable to find a single stretch of free land that is 26 miles long in Area A, where the PA has both security and civil authority. See Marathon report
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30th March, land day.
On 30 March 1976, thousands of Palestinians living as a minority in Israel mounted a general strike and organised protests against Israeli government plans to expropriate almost 15,000 acres of Palestinian land in the Galilee.The Israeli government, led by prime minister Yitzhak Rabin and defence minister Shimon Peres, sent in the army to break up the general strike. The Israeli army killed six unarmed Palestinians, wounded hundreds and arrested hundreds more, including political activists. All were citizens of Israel.
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"In 2011, 722,000 Israelis lived beyond the Green Line, including in settlements and East Jerusalem. This was a 5% increase over 2010."
source: Richard Silverstein via Yisrael HaYom
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* Out of 103 investigations opened in 2012 into alleged offences committed by Israeli soldiers in the occupied territories, not a single indictment served to date
Yesh Din, 3 Feb 2013
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* In total, out of an area of 1.6 million dunams in the Jordan Valley, Israel has seized 1.25 million − some 77.5 percent − where Palestinians are forbidden to enter.
Haaretz editorial, 4 Feb 2013
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A Heartfelt Wish/DVD


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Posts

How to give the consumer power to boycott Occupation products

South Africa: What’s in a label?
A new law requiring Israel to label products made beyond the Green Line will empower civil society.

Neve Gordon, Al Jazeera
June 13, 2012

Be’er-Sheva, Israel – South Africa’s recent demand that products originating in Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank and Golan Heights remove the label “Made in Israel” is extremely significant – much more so than the European Union’s decision to deny these products preferential status and subject them to customs duty.

Indeed, in 2001, the European Commission decided to implement the rules of origin clause in its Association Agreement with Israel, noting that “places brought under Israeli administration since 1967… are not entitled to benefit from the preferential treatment under the Agreements”. The EU decision aimed to correct an alleged case of massive fraud involving the regulations on rules of origin, which appear in the trade agreement. Consequently, only goods produced inside the internationally recognised borders of Israel would be eligible for a reduced tariff rate, while those produced outside would pay customs’ duty as required by law.

Under the terms of the arrangement hammered out between the EU and Israel in December 2004, Israeli customs authorities are required to provide the precise name of the city, village or industrial park and accompanying postcode, where the production takes place. The European customs officers have a list of Israeli settlements that fall beyond Israel’s 1967 borders, and when they identify a product from the settlements, they subject it to the seven per cent customs’ duty. However, the agreement stipulates that Israeli products from the Occupied Territories continue to be labelled “Made in Israel”.

The economic impact of implementing the rules of origin has been negligible. According to Who Profits, an organisation that monitors Israeli industry in the Occupied Territories, there are 136 Israeli companies – such as, Bagel Bagel and Soda Stream – operating in the West Bank and Golan Heights, that export goods to the EU. Ninety-six of these companies have headquarters inside Israel proper (the pre-1967 borders based on the 1949 armistice agreement), and it appears that some use postcodes from within Israel so as to make the case that the merchandise sent to the EU is not manufactured in the Occupied Territories.

Empowering civil society

Even those companies that do not have plants in Israel have not suffered due to the imposition of customs duties, since Israel has established a compensation mechanism for Israeli exporters from the settlements. The government, put simply, has decided to absorb the cost of the duties, thus guaranteeing that the companies in the Occupied Territories do not incur any losses. In 2011, the Israeli government allocated US $3 million to this fund. Taking into account that the EU is Israel’s biggest trading partner and that exports from Israel to the EU during that year were over $12.5bn, Israel’s losses due to the implementation of the rules of origin have been insignificant at best.

The recent South African decision is very different, even though it also is based on rules of origin. By requiring Israel to change the label of products manufactured beyond the Green Line, South Africa empowers its own civil society, enabling consumers to decide whether or not they want to purchase a given product. This may very well provide the necessary incentive to push Israeli companies in the Occupied Territories to move back to Israel.

According to Who Profit, since 2001, when the EU began threatening to implement the rules of origin, only one out of well over a hundred Israeli export companies in the West Bank and Golan Heights has relocated to Israel. There was simply no incentive, because Israel compensated the companies for their losses, and the EU negotiators had disempowered their own citizens by agreeing that the labels remain “Made in Israel”. Due to the agreement EU consumers had no way of knowing where the products they were buying actually come from and could not show their dissatisfaction with Israel’s occupation.

The South African decision not only undermines the fraudulent practice of labelling products made outside Israel as if they were made in Israel, but more importantly, it empowers consumers by allowing them to shop in a way that accords with their moral convictions. If the United Kingdom and Denmark follow suit, then other countries will also likely join the bandwagon, making it possible for international civil society to help – in concrete ways – put an end to Israel’s occupation.

Neve Gordon is the author of Israel’s Occupation more information and contact at his website.

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