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Israel

Livni fears UK-led push to boycott settlement goods

The Israeli and British governments have clashed over imports from West Bank settlements.

November 6, 2008 14:21

By

Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

1 min read

The Israeli and British governments have clashed over imports from West Bank settlements, with Jerusalem concerned this may be the first salvo in a British-led international campaign.

The issue has been personally pursued by Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who, according to an internal document "has proposed a round-table involving UK government officials, NGOs, and retailers" to discuss it.

The dispute arises from complaints by the UK Revenues and Customs service that Israeli companies label products, especially fruit and vegetables grown on West Bank settlements, as originating within the Green Line.

In 2005, Ehud Olmert, then Israeli Finance Minister, and the then-European Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson agreed that Israeli EU imports would be labelled with the postcodes of the area where they were produced, enabling governments and retailers to know if they originated on a settlement. The Israel-EU preferential trade agreement only covers products from within the Green Line. Now the Foreign Office is demanding that Israel identify settlement products more clearly.

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