person:ora coren

  • Gilad Erdan handed the anti-BDS mantle
    Israeli officials note that while the boycott movement has inflicted little damage so far, it is picking up steam.
    By Ora Coren | Jun. 11, 2015 | Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News
    http://www.haaretz.com/business/.premium-1.660635

    Gilad Erdan, who in addition to being information minister and public security minister is also strategic affairs minister, is creating a unit in the latter ministry to combat foreign efforts to boycott Israel. Erdan has been formally given the green light to handle the issue, as well as a budget, according to diplomatic sources.

    The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement has increased its public profile recently, notably over the European Union’s move to require origin labeling for products from West Bank Jewish settlements. BDS activists are also leading efforts to get United States colleges and universities to divest from companies that have business ties with Israel, including firms with a presence in West Bank settlements or that do business with the Israel Defense Forces.

    Israeli officials say that while the BDS movement has had only a marginal impact so far, it seems to be gathering support over a feeling in many Western countries that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s new government is unlikely to vigorously pursue peace talks with the Palestinians. If not a present threat, BDS is seen as a potential future strategic threat.

    The boycott has been around in various forms for decades, and in earlier years centered on a refusal in the Arab world to do business with companies that conduct business in Israel. Confronted with the choice of Arab business or the benefit of a presence in a Jewish state that had a small, generally poor population at the time, for some companies the decision was to opt for commerce with the Arab world. That boycott faded by the 1990s, particularly after Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization signed the first Oslo Accords in 1993.

    The newer incarnation of the boycott is the BDS movement, which has also resulted in raucous demonstrations in front of Israeli offices and stores selling merchandise made in the settlements.

    The Europeans have excluded products produced in West Bank settlements, which are outside the sovereign territory of the State of Israel, from liberalized trade provisions that commerce between EU countries and Israel normally enjoy. In addition, the settlement labeling provision is expected to come into force in the coming months so that consumers can identify such products more easily. Nonetheless, a spokesperson in Israel for the European Commission told TheMarker that the EU is officially opposed to boycotts of any kind, including anti-Israeli boycotts.

    The most recent controversy over the prospect of overseas businesses pulling out of Israel came with comments made in Cairo last week by Stephane Richard (see further coverage below), CEO of Orange S.A., the firm that used to be known as France Telecom. He reportedly said that he would pull the use of the Orange brand by Israel cellular service provider Partner Communications “tomorrow” if it wouldn’t cost the company major sums in legal damages. Richard later apologized for any offense caused, and his company explained that he was referring to a corporate decision that the Orange brand not be used by firms that Orange S.A. doesn’t own, rather than any anti-Israel animosity.

    In response to the flap, however, an emergency anti-boycott summit was convened in the American Jewish community by Las Vegas gambling magnate Sheldon Adelson, a major supporter of Republican candidates in the U.S. and the Netanyahu government, and by Israeli-American entertainment mogul Haim Saban, a Democratic party supporter who has a controlling interest in Partner Communications.

    European Jewry has also mobilized. The Europe Israel Press Association is organizing a mission to Israel for about 15 senior business reporters and editors from Britain, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium and Poland, with the aim of making it clear to Europeans what they stand to lose by boycotting Israel.

    Rabbi Menachem Margolin, who founded the EIPA and also serves as director of the European Jewish Association, said that in his opinion anti-Israeli sentiment has long ago been transformed into the new form of anti-Semitism that European Jewry is confronting. In recent years, the advocacy efforts have included dialogue sessions with hundreds of editors, reporters, bloggers and commentators from leading European media outlets. The effort has been funded by European Jews, Margolin said, adding that he thinks the time has come for the Israeli government to provide funding for it. He suggested that the funding be drawn from the defense budget, since he said it affects the security of Europe’s Jews and Israel.

    Economists and business people in Israel are still voicing the opinion that the effects of the boycott have been marginal, involving mostly damage to Israel’s image. Most of the companies making concessions to the boycott are European, along with a few American firms. The high-tech sector seems immune to the pressures – the technology sector here includes global giants such as Google, Facebook, Apple and Intel.

    European companies involved in the infrastructure and defense sectors, however, seem more sensitive to pro-Palestinian campaigning. Someone who was involved in the purchase of training aircraft from Italy for the Israel Air Force in a transaction signed about six months ago recounted: “When we put the transaction together, we were careful not to put British components into the planes because Britain bans the export of military equipment parts that could be used for an attack.”

    The boycott has also affected investment in Israel, as is apparent from the fact that the major global energy companies have not sought to explore for natural gas in Israel’s economic waters. (Instead a consortium that includes a smaller U.S. firm, Noble Energy, has.) Economic sources say the absence of the energy giants is the result of the boycott rather than any Israeli government regulatory policy.

    On the other hand, a Dutch infrastructure company that does business in the Arab world recently submitted a bid to build a new privately-run port in Ashdod, “We haven’t encountered any negative aspect on the part of major Dutch companies operating in Israel,” Henriette Fuchs, an international tax lawyer with the Pearl Cohen law firm, noted this week. “On the contrary, they relate to business with Israel in a very professional manner.”

    The companies know how to split their operations between Israel and the Arab world, she added, so as not to alienate Arab customers.

    On the other hand, Norman Menachem Feder of the Caspi & Co. law firm noted negative political consequences on foreign business transactions after Israel built the West Bank separation barrier, a project that started more than a decade ago, which he said caused some infrastructure firms to leave Israel unexpectedly. But Feder also noted that legislative efforts have been gaining traction in the U.S. to combat the anti-Israel boycott.

    #BDS

  • French, U.K. defense firms bolt Tel Aviv arms expo
    Limitations on certain weapons exports to Israel, put in place during 2014 Gaza war, cause some defense firms to withdraw from this week’s International Defense and Security Expo in Tel Aviv.
    By Ora Coren | Jun. 3, 2015 | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/business/.premium-1.659347

    Some French and British defense firms have withdrawn from this week’s International Defense and Security Expo in Tel Aviv after failing to get approval from their countries’ defense ministries to export particularly sensitive equipment to Israel, a source told TheMarker.

    After some equipment from Western suppliers was put off limits to Israel during last summer’s war with Hamas and its allies in the Gaza Strip, Israel decided to rely more on Israeli-produced technology, the source said.

    This is no boycott of Israel, said the source, who is associated with ISDEF, as the defense fair is known, but there are a lot of Western countries that over the years are preventing the export of offensive equipment to Israel. The situation affects companies from France, Germany, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and Austria, the source added. The equipment that failed to get export approval includes sharpshooting weaponry, drone aircraft, ammunition including purportedly non-lethal ammunition such as sponge-coated bullets, and other special ammunition for guns and rifles.

  • Sans aucun doute une victoire de la campagne Boycott Désinvestissement Sanctions, malgré les dénégations du PDG de Sodastream :

    SodaStream doit décider s’ils ferment une usine controversée de Cisjordanie

    Jeudi, 28 Août 2014 22:45

    Le PDG dit qu’il s’agit seulement d’une décision commerciale et que la compagnie ne cède pas à la « terreur financière » du mouvement BDS.

    par Ora Coren, Haaretz – 28 août 2014

    Sodastream prendra d’ici deux mois la décision de fermer ou non l’usine de Cisjordanie qui a provoqué une campagne de boycott, désinvestissement sanctions très médiatisée contre le fabricant d’appareils de boissons basé en Israël, a dit mercredi le PDG Daniel Birnbaum.

    La décision du fabricant de boissons israélien n’a rien à voir avec les « terroristes financiers » qui ont organisé le boycott, a dit Birnbaum. La campagne BDS a fait l’actrice américaine Scarlett Johansson la chérie des sympathisants israéliens lorsqu’elle a quitté sa fonction de représentante d’Oxfam après que l’organisation caritative lui a intimé qu’elle ne pouvait représenter Sodastream si elle devait rester avec Oxfam.

    Les considérations [pour décider de la fermeture de l’usine] seront purement financières et n’incluront pas le boycott européen de la fabrication dans les territoires [occupés],

    a dit Brinbaum.

    Ils n’incluront pas non plus les appels variés à boycotter les produits de la compagnie à cause de sa localisation à Ma’aleh Adumim. Le boycott est une nuisance, mais ne provoque pas de dommage financier sérieux. Nous ne cédons pas au boycott. Nous sommes sionistes.

    Le fabriquant d’appareils à soda domestiques — qui a perdu plus de 35% de sa valeur dans la dernière année, a rapporté l’organe d’information financière The Street le 19 août — ne cèdera pas aux exigences des boycotteurs, a dit Brinbaum.

    Nous ne cédons pas à la terreur

    , a-t-il dit.

    La fermeture possible de l’usine de Cisjordanie, située dans la zone industrielle de Mishor Adumim, près de Jérusalem, résulte de l’extension de l’activité dans une nouvelle usine au Neguev, dans la ville de Lehavim. Même si l’usine de Mishor Adumim reste ouverte, Sodastream pourrait aussi décider d’ici deux mois d’y réduire l’activité. La compagnie transfère plusieurs lignes de production de Mishor Adumim, où les appareils à boissons sont fabriqués, à Lehavim.

    Sodastream a déjà licencié entre 100 et 200 ouvriers de l’usine de Cisjordanie. Il s’y trouve maintenant 1100 employés, dont 850 sont des Arabes israéliens ou des Palestiniens.

    La compagnie a aussi une usine en Galilée et une autre à Ashkelon, ainsi que 20 autres usines dans le monde.

    Birnbaum a dit que SodaStream prévoit de réduire les coûts de l’appareil à faire des sodas de 4% s’il devient plus efficace. Mais les nouvelles ne sont pas toutes bonnes.

    Dans un rapport récent sur ses revenus, la compagnie a révisé à la baisse son revenu attendu, disant qu’elle s’attend à une hausse de 5% au lieu de 15%. Au début du mois, The Street a rapporté que la compagnie continuait à montrer une marge de profit plus basse et avait échoué à étendre sa portée en Amérique du nord.

    En août également, la société de gestion Soros de Mexico George Soros a vendu sa participation à la compagnie.

    Source : http://www.haaretz.com/business/.premium-1.612799


    Commentaire de Omar Barghouti :

    Un passage qui vaut de l’or :

    Le boycott est une nuisance, mais il ne cause pas de dommages financiers sérieux. Nous ne cédons pas au boycott. Nous sommes des sionistes

    —PDG de SodaStream.

    J’ai déjà dit que le mouvement BDS devrait envoyer à Scarlett Johansson une boîte de chocolats Godiva pour son rôle significatif (même si non intentionnel) dans la promotion du mouvement BDS et dans ses succès, le tout pro bono . Je pense que nous devons envoyer au PDG de Sodastream une boîte de friandises de luxe encore plus grande pour nous fournir si explicitement la logique à l’œuvre derrière le boycott d’Israël.

    En septembre 2013, avant que la campagne BDS contre Sodastream ne batte son plein, l’action de la compagnie était à peu près à 68$. Maintenant elle vaut environ 34 $. C’est une perte de valeur de 50% !

    Donc quand le ou la PDG d’une compagnie complice ciblée, si efficacement, par BDS voit l’action de sa compagnie tomber de 50% et décide, en conséquence, d’ôter ce qu’il ou elle perçoit comme la cause de cette campagne, bien sûr, c’est une décision commerciale ! Est-ce que nous avons jamais dit autre chose ?

    Une correction à l’information de l’article ci-dessous : Soros s’est désinvesti de SodaStream durant le premier trimestre 2014, et non en août, comme nous le savons directement des partenaires de Soros. Mais la fondation et société de gestion n’a jamais eu le courage d’annoncer publiquement le désinvestissement, ce qui a poussé le mouvement BDS à le révéler aux médias au début du mois [d’août].

    http://www.bdsfrance.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3296%3Asodastream-doit-decid

    #BDS#Sodastream#Cisjordanie#colonisation

  • Israeli food makers seek solution to EU settlement sanctions

    The EU bans the import of organic produce from settlements. From September 1 it will block the entry of all animal products, including eggs, poultry and dairy.
    By Ora Coren | Aug. 18, 2014 Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/business/.premium-1.611022

    Israeli manufacturers are preparing for increased limitations on imports to the European Union of products produced in the settlements. The European Union may ban outright foods grown or raised in Israeli settlements or manufactured foods using raw materials from settlements.

    The EU bans the import of organic produce from settlements. From September 1, it will block the entry of all animal products, including eggs, poultry and dairy. Israeli industry figures fear the ban could be extended to conventionally grown produce and will force Israel’s food export industry from using produce grown in the settlements.

    This would include not only West Bank settlements but also the Golan Heights and East Jerusalem.

    The Agriculture Ministry, in partnership with the economy and foreign ministries, is trying to persuade the EU to reverse the decision, but it is also preparing Israeli producers for its implications.

    The official EU reason behind the decision is public health. Since the European authorities do not recognize Agriculture Ministry activity beyond the Green Line, food from the area is considered unregulated.

    According to the Israel Export Institute, in 2013 Israel exported some $87 million in processed fruit and vegetable products to the EU, out of the total food exports of $365 million. This includes goods from both sides of the Green Line.

    One source said the EU’s approach suggested that it was likely to extend the ban to foods manufactured in Israel proper using produce grown in settlements. That would effectively bar Israel’s food industry from exporting to Europe. To counter the ban, companies would have to create two production lines, with goods designated for Europe using only ingredients sourced from within Israel’s pre-1967 borders.

    “This is an illogical expense for the entire industry. The agriculture, foreign and economy ministries are trying to keep the EU from toughening its stance in conversations in Brussels. This is unquestionably a very significant tightening of restrictions in exports to Europe. We are cautiously optimistic, but if the move goes forward Israel must adapt to European regulations,” one source said.

    In 2012, the EU stopped recognizing the area beyond the Green Line as Israeli. Exports from this area did not receive the import duty benefits of Israel’s free-trade agreement with the EU.

    But different EU agencies interpreted this decision differently. In 2013 the EU stopped recognizing Agriculture Ministry supervision of organic agriculture in the West Bank and banned the import of this produce on the grounds that because it was unsupervised it posed a danger to public health.

    A workaround was found for these goods, through July 2015: Companies registered in Palestinian towns would buy the produce and export it to Europe, under the supervision of a Swiss firm.

    In February, the EU decided to stop recognizing Agriculture Ministry veterinary supervision beyond the Green Line, from September 1. That means Israel will have to stop exporting poultry and other animal products from the territories to EU markets.

    Israel exported $36 million in processed meat products to Europe last year.

    Off Tov, which exports chicken products to Europe, will set up different production lines for chickens raised in the settlements and those raised within the Green Line. A European delegation came to observe the setup last month.

    Last week, the Agriculture Ministry’s veterinary services sent a letter to dairies, instructing them to separate raw milk from the settlements from that produced within Israel proper.

    In opposing the planned sanctions, Israel argues that they will hurt Palestinian workers, for example at dairies in the Jordan Valley, and damage Israeli-Palestinian relations.

    In the meantime, Israel plans to increase agricultural exports to Russia, in the wake of Moscow’s restrictions on European imports.