Hagit Ofran is Director of the Israeli Peace Now movement;s Settlement Watch Project. (7/19/11) There is a
sense of outrage within the Israeli public following the passing of "the boycott law" in the Knesset last week. The law
allows any individual or institution who faces possible damage as a result of any person's call for boycott settlement
products to sue that person. Evidence of actual damage will not be required. Organizations calling for such boycott
could lose their legal standing as non profit organization. This law has pushed many Israelis to support boycotting the
settlements for the first time. In several hours, thousands joined a new Peace Now Facebook page entitled "So sue me, I
boycott settlement products." Prior to this law, most Israelis considered a boycott one step too far. However
forbidding boycott of settlements seems to delegitimize the very debate over the settlements pushing many to actively
boycott settlements' products. Paradoxically, the boycott law affirms the reasoning behind the anti-Israeli BDS
movement, by erasing the differentiation between Israel and the Occupied Territories. The boycott law implies that the
settlements are of equal legal and moral legitimacy to Israel proper. If this is the case, those who do not accept
Israeli occupation over the territories as legitimate, should by inference see Israel itself as not legitimate as well.
For me, like for many other Israelis, such a conclusion is alarming, and therefore we cannot silently accept this law.
The boycott law and subsequent boycotts make the hundreds of Israeli businesses in the West Bank an issue of central
importance. Whether the number of these businesses is growing or shrinking is debated by different sources; I know of a
few that have left in recent years, but others that have been set up as well. Last week, the government released a
tender for six new factories in the settlements. Interestingly, five of these were tendered four years ago, but failed
due to a lack of proposals. This implies that, despite what settlers may be saying, investors are reluctant to invest
in businesses in the Occupied Territories. Over the years, the Israeli government created numerous incentives for
businesses and factories to be built in the Occupied Territories. Cheap (or some times free) lands, tax deductions and
funding of salaries for new employees were only parts of those incentives. Another incentive, provided by the Israeli
government, is compensation for settler exporters for loss of tax discounts in the EU, which does not recognize goods
from the territories as goods from Israel under the free trade agreement. This spending accounts for NIS 11,160,000 of
the Israeli budget in year 2011. These payments are a clear reason for businesses to move to the West Bank, or at least
to stay there. While the boycotts may attribute to this reluctance, there is another, more prosaic, reason for
decreased interest in West Bank factories. Building a factory in the West Bank used to mean not only government
incentives, but also very cheap Palestinian labor. Some of the Israeli employers would take advantage of the
Palestinian workers' dire need for work and paid them disgracefully low wages. However a few years ago, after a long
struggle by Israeli worker rights organizations such as Kav La'oved, the Israeli Court ruled that Israeli employers in
settlements, although employing Palestinians that are not citizens of Israel (and in fact are based in territories that
are not part of Israel), must obey by the Israeli laws of employment and provide all basic labor rights to Palestinian
workers (i.e. minimum wage, vacation days, etc.). For law-abiding employers, this ruling means that the opportunity to
exploit Palestinian labor no longer exists and therefore having a factory in the settlements became even less
attractive. I've seen discussions prompted by the right wing claiming that boycotting the settlements harms the tens of
thousands of Palestinian workers who rely on those factories for work -- as if the idea of building settlements was for
the benefit of the Palestinians. That is inherently cynical and nasty. The factories that were built in the Occupied
Territories were built on a foundation of exploitation and immorality, as part of the Israeli occupation that controls
the lands without allowing the Palestinian residents of those lands any civil rights. Palestinian workers are not
wronged by boycotts; they are systematically wronged by the reality of occupation. The boycott law revitalized the
extremely important issue of the settlements. With the momentum it created leading into September, what should be a
very important month for Israel on the world stage, this law serves to unite Israelis against the settlements in a way
that was formerly taboo. A law intended to prevent anti-settlement activity paradoxically roused the Israeli public
against the settlements in a resounding call to action. This blog was co-authored by Jennifer Kaplan.
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