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Little Tich

(6,171 posts)
Thu Jan 28, 2016, 11:22 PM Jan 2016

US issues telling reminder of labeling rules on Israeli products from West Bank

Source: Times of Israel

Days after ambassador slammed Israel’s policies, State Department stresses requirement to distinguish between Israel, settlement goods

In a move that seemed designed to underline US opposition to Israel’s settlement policies, Washington has issued a reminder that products imported from the West Bank or Gaza Strip should not be labeled “Made in Israel,” the State Department confirmed Thursday.

The guidance was issued last week by US Customs. Debate has since erupted after media reports suggested Washington was hardening its stance against Israeli settlement policy. Sources in the Israeli Foreign Ministry said Thursday night that they were studying the new US notice.

The move came soon after US Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro sharply criticized Israel’s West Bank settlement policy, alleging that Israel has two standards of law in the territory — one for Israelis and another for Palestinians. Shapiro’s remarks prompted a furious critique from Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Netanyahu has also frequently lambasted the European Union for its policy of requiring labels on West Bank settlement products, while the US has backed the EU position.

State Department spokesman Mark Toner said Thursday that the US decision to reissue its labeling policy had been taken after complaints that some West Bank products had been mislabeled prior to US import.

Read more: http://www.timesofisrael.com/us-restates-labeling-rules-on-israeli-products-from-west-bank/

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TheBlackAdder

(28,155 posts)
1. Yet, meat shipped to the US does not have to be named. Isn't the 'Made in USA' under challenge?
Fri Jan 29, 2016, 12:17 AM
Jan 2016

.


I thought some international trade organization was challenging the 'Made in USA' stampings.


Or is it something that's in the TPP? And if it's in the TPP, does 'Made in Israel' go away too?


.

azurnoir

(45,850 posts)
2. simple truth in labeling can't say it made in a country or territory it wasn't - oh and about meat
Fri Jan 29, 2016, 10:04 AM
Jan 2016

maybe Israel should complain to WTO or threaten a law suit

First, Congress and President Barack Obama teamed up to repeal mandatory country-of-origin labeling for pork and beef products. The labeling requirements were eliminated through an attachment to the omnibus budget bill passed by Congress and signed by Obama earlier this month.

The move was prompted by threats from the World Trade Organization (WTO), which threatened to allow Mexico and Canada to hit the U.S. with more than $1 billion in tariffs if it continued to require beef and pork labeling for foreign producers. The WTO said the labels discriminate against meat from animals raised and slaughtered outside the United States.


http://www.allgov.com/news/controversies/us-government-repeals-county-of-origin-labels-for-beef-and-pork-orders-epa-to-not-monitor-pollution-caused-by-meat-industry-151231?news=858065

Israeli

(4,139 posts)
4. The end of normalcy for Israeli settlements?
Sat Jan 30, 2016, 04:35 AM
Jan 2016
Stricter trade guidelines, harsher rhetoric and corporate responsibility campaigns all send a clear message: Israel’s closest allies are no longer willing to passively accept the occupation, and the only consensus on settlements is that they are illegal.

The United States appears to be following the European Union in taking symbolic steps to challenge the aura of normalcy with which Israel has cloaked its settlement enterprise for decades.

United States Customs officials published a notice last week clarifying that U.S. law does not permit goods manufactured in the West Bank, including in Israeli settlements, to be labeled as “made in Israel.”

The regulation is over 20 years old and the notice is just a reminder, the U.S. was quick to point out to journalists who scrambled to draw parallels to the European Union’s settlement labeling guidelines published late last year.

And while there are some significant differences between the two regulations regarding settlement products, primarily that under EU rules settlement goods are ineligible for duty free import, the message is the same.

Israel has never annexed the West Bank (save for East Jerusalem) and no country has ever recognized Israeli claims to the West Bank, East Jerusalem, the Gaza Strip or Golan Heights. Over the past two decades, however, under the cover of various peace processes, the number of Israelis living on occupied land has swelled and swelled to well past 500,000 settlers.

Israeli leaders from across the political spectrum speak of “consensus settlement blocs” as if there is no question that large swaths of the West Bank will remain under Israeli control forever, regardless of whether the Palestinians or anybody else consents. Ministers in the current government openly advocate the unilateral annexation of more than 60 percent of the West Bank.

When it comes to Israel’s economy, financial instruments, national infrastructure, natural resources, and the legal system for Israeli citizens, the Green Line — where Israel ends and Palestine begins as far as the world is concerned— no longer exists. Israel’s civilian hold on the West Bank, like its military regime that rules its Palestinian residents, has become an accomplished fact on the ground.

But make no mistake: the matter of settlements is far more serious and consequential than attempts to influence future borders. The very existence of Israeli settlements among the Palestinian population directly results in myriad human rights violations. It has created what can only be described as a system of apartheid, under which two populations living in the exact same space are subject to separate and unequal legal systems.

Over the past year or so, as prospects for a negotiated two-state solution have become less and less imaginable, there is a corresponding growing chorus of international actors who are no longer willing to treat Israel’s settlement enterprise as business as usual.


First there were the EU settlement guidelines reiterating that all agreements with Israel are valid only west of the Green Line, then its labeling guidelines for settlement goods sold in Europe. The governments of Germany, France, Italy, Spain, the UK, and the Netherlands all warned businesses based in their countries to not engage in commercial or financial activity in Israeli settlements.

Part of a burgeoning worldwide movement encouraging corporate social responsibility, a number of companies and investment funds, particularly in Europe, have been quietly reducing their ties with the Israeli settlement enterprise. For some, that has meant pulling out of the Israeli market almost entirely.

Last year, +972 Magazine reported how three Israeli cellular phone companies — including the franchisee of French-owned Orange — had been paying Israeli settlers to build cellular antennas on land the settlers stole from its rightful Palestinian owners. Earlier this month Orange announced that it is ending its brand licensing agreement in all of Israel.

Earlier this month, we reported about how Airbnb allows Israeli settlers to rent their homes to unsuspecting tourists, thereby making the occupation even more profitable. The American company is now the target of a campaign demanding that it stop doing business in the settlements.

Just last week, Human Rights Watch published a report calling on businesses to cease operating in Israeli settlements. The report, “Occupation, Inc.”, aims to demonstrate how businesses operating in settlements harm Palestinians, but also how they strengthen make the occupation itself more sustainable — and profitable.

And now the United States, which regularly expresses its opposition to Israeli settlements with measured statements that rarely ruffle anybody anywhere, has sharpened its approach on two fronts in one week. First, Ambassador Dan Shapiro said in a prominent speech that the U.S. is “perplexed” by continued settlement expansion, which he said, “raises honest questions about Israel’s long-term intentions” regarding a two-state solution.

A few days later, the U.S. reissued a guidance notice on labeling products from the West Bank, which appeared to be a warning about mislabeling of Israeli settlement goods. Pushed on the issue, the State Department clarified that as a matter of policy the United States differentiates between Israel proper and the West Bank.

These clarifications, regulations and corporate responsibility campaigns are subtle. For the most part, they do not constitute anything new — they are almost all reiterations and reminders of long-standing policies and regulations by Israel’s strongest allies. They do not deliver the shock and awe many people have come to expect from BDS, and they will have little immediate impact. Nevertheless, they are meant to send a strong and clear message: the world, including Israel’s closest allies, is no longer willing to passively accept Israel’s permanent military occupation of Palestine, and the only consensus on settlements is that they are illegal.


Source: http://972mag.com/the-end-of-normalcy-for-israeli-settlements/116422/

Little Tich

(6,171 posts)
5. TOI: Minister condemns US for demanding West Bank products be labeled
Sat Jan 30, 2016, 11:48 PM
Jan 2016

Source: Times of Israel

Uri Ariel slams ‘unreasonable’ State Department decision to stress requirement to distinguish between Israel, settlement goods

Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Uri Ariel on Friday said that while Washington’s decision to issue a reminder that products imported from the West Bank or the Gaza Strip should not be labeled “Made in Israel” may not necessarily imply a shift in policy, the decision itself and its timing were nevertheless “unreasonable, unfair and inappropriate.”

Speaking with Israel Radio, Ariel, a former settlement leader from the Orthodox-nationalist Jewish Home party, added that Israel should consider whether it truly needs to have an agricultural attache remain in the United States. He said Israel should weigh other options as well, such as transferring the attache to India or China.

The guidance concerning products imported from the West Bank or the Gaza Strip was issued last week by US Customs, and the State Department confirmed the reminder Thursday. Debate has erupted after media reports suggested Washington was hardening its stance against Israeli settlement policy. Sources in the Israeli Foreign Ministry said Thursday night that they were studying the new US notice, and the ministry said Friday the ruling was merely a reminder of a 21-year-old policy. But Army Radio on Friday reported it as a significant concession to “Palestinian pressure.”

The move came days after US Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro sharply criticized Israel’s West Bank settlement policy, alleging that Israel has two standards of law in the territory — one for Israelis; and another for Palestinians. Shapiro’s remarks prompted a furious critique from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The PM has also frequently lambasted the European Union for its policy of requiring labels on West Bank settlement products, while the US has backed the EU position.

Read more: http://www.timesofisrael.com/minister-condemns-us-reminder-on-labeling-rules-for-west-bank-products/

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