Italy 26 May 2010
The following release was issued by Stop Agrexco Italia on 22 May 2010:
Following lobbying efforts by the Italian Coalition Against Carmel-Agrexco, two major Italian supermarket chains, COOP and Nordiconad, announced the suspension of sales of products from Agrexco, the principal exporter of produce from Israel and the illegal Israeli settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Nordiconad director Mr. Covili announced that as of the end of April Agrexco products will no longer be found in their supermarkets. Nordiconad is a cooperative responsible for central purchasing and distribution operations for CONAD in northern Italy. COOP Italia, via quality assurance director Mr. Zucchi, instead confirmed that there is a problem with traceability, namely that the consumer is unable to verify whether or not the product in question comes from the occupied territories. Therefore COOP Italia has decided to “suspend the supply of products from the occupied territories.”
The Italian supermarket lobbying campaign was launched in January this year after a national meeting of the Stop Agrexco coalition in Savona, where Agrexco ships dock for distribution in Italy. Efforts are being coordinated with similar movements in Europe, including the Coalition Contre Agrexco in France, which unites more than 90 groups with the common goal of opposing plans to base the Israeli company at the port of Sete (Languedoc-Roussillon). In Italy, COOP and Conad members and customers, as well as groups active in the Stop Agrexco campaign, began sending letters of protest to COOP’s consumer magazines demanding they suspend sales of goods produced in settlements in the occupied territories. The initiative was then extended to CONAD and the campaign culminated on 30 March, Palestinian Land Day and Global Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Day, with coordinated protests, sit-ins and awareness raising initiatives in supermarkets in several Italian cities. Following these actions, correspondence was initiated with COOP and CONAD management, which then led to direct contact and meetings with the Stop Agrexco Coalition, during which representatives of the coalition provided additional documentation concerning the illegalities involved in the trade of settlement products as well as violations of international law and human rights in Palestine characterized by the production of settlement goods.
The results obtained thanks to the efforts of responsible consumers, COOP and CONAD members and Stop Agrexco activists are undoubtedly positive. However, the Stop Agrexco coalition has vowed to make sure that both chains follow through on their promises, and encourages everyone to participate in this struggle for respect for international law, and freedom and self-determination for the Palestinian people.
About Agrexco
Agrexco Agricultural Export Company Ltd. is the largest exporter of Israeli agricultural produce and distributes 60-70 percent of fruit, vegetables, flowers and herbs produced in the Israeli settlements illegally built on Palestinian land. The company was founded in 1956 and is 50 percent government-owned. Agrexco has roughly 500 employees with offices in Europe, Japan and the US. In 2008, the Israeli Finance Ministry announced a decision to privatize the company, however privatization has not yet been initiated. During a trial held in England in 2004, the general manager of Agrexco UK, Amos Orr, testified that Agrexco exports 60-70 percent of all produce coming from the Israeli settlements. The company’s web site, in fact, advertises figs from Masuah, an Israeli settlement in the Jordan Valley. Settlement products together with products from Israel are marketed under the brand name “Carmel.” Some 80 percent of Agrexco produce is exported and sold in Europe, primarily in Great Britain. In the summer of 2009, Italy began playing a role in the distribution of products from the illegal settlements, providing one of the two major European ports where Agrexco ships dock, the port of Vado Ligure, near Savona (Genoa).
The boycott, divestment and sanctions movement (BDS)
In 2005, Palestinian civil society put together a unified proposal for international solidarity movements: determine ways to boycott Israeli products, divestment from Israeli businesses, place sanctions on Israel, and boycott Israeli cultural and academic institutions that cooperate with, or fail to take a stand against, the occupation or the apartheid system. These demands were formulated in the BDS campaign (www.bdsmovement.org). The BDS movement has already chalked up a number of successes (for example, against companies such as Veolia, Africa-Israel and Motorola) and has gained endorsements from civil society, academic, labor and governmental organizations around the world, Israel included. The very same trade unions representing the Palestinian workers exploited as cheap labor in the Israeli settlement plantations are among the promoters of the BDS campaign.
Stop Agrexco Italy
The Italian coalition against Carmel-Agrexco was created in the fall of 2009, following a conference in Pisa on the international boycott divestment and sanctions campaign, the nonviolent response by Palestinian civil society to the Israeli occupation. The Italian coalition against Agrexco fully endorses the Palestinian BDS call, together with a growing number of Italian and international organizations and movements. The goal is to use boycott, divestment and sanctions initiatives against Israel, similar to those applied to South Africa during apartheid, to encourage the Israeli government to respect international law and recognize the Palestinian people’s inalienable right to self-determination. The Italian Coalition against Agrexco has thus far received endorsements from more than 50 local and national associations, trade unions and political parties, including Assopace, Attac, Women in Black — Italy, Federazione della Sinistra, FIOM-CIGL, Forum Palestina, Pax Christi — Italy, Rete ECO (Jews Against the Occupation), Service Civil International — Italy, Sinistra Critica and Un ponte per.