Ben Jerrys To Stop Sales In Israeli-Occupied Palestinian Territories

MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) â" Ben & Jerryâs said Monday it was going to stop selling its ice cream in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and contested east Jerusalem, saying the sales in the territories sought by the Palestinians are âinconsistent with our values.â
The announcement was one of the strongest and highest-profile rebukes by a well-known company of Israelâs policy of settling its citizens on war-won lands. The settlements are widely seen by the international community as illegal and obstacles to peace.
The move by the Vermont-based ice cream company drew swift reproach from Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, a former leader of the West Bank settlement movement who called it âan immoral decision and I believe that it will turn out to be a business mistake, too.â
The company informed its longstanding licensee â" responsible for manufacturing and distributing the ice cream in Israel â" that it will not renew the license agreement when it expires at the end of next year, according to a statement posted on the Vermont-based companyâs website.
The Ben & Jerryâs statement cited âthe concerns shared with us by our fans and trusted partners.â
The company did not explicitly identify those concerns, but last month, a group called Vermonters for Justice in Palestine called on Ben & Jerryâs to âend complicity in Israelâs occupation and abuses of Palestinian human rights.â
âHow much longer will Ben & Jerryâs permit its Israeli-manufactured ice cream to be sold in Jewish-only settlements while Palestinian land is being confiscated, Palestinian homes are being destroyed, and Palestinian families in neighborhoods like Sheik Jarrah are facing eviction to make way for Jewish settlers?â the organizationâs Ian Stokes said in a June 10 news release.
In a Monday statement, the organization said Ben & Jerryâs actions did not go far enough.
âBy maintaining a presence in Israel, Ben & Jerryâs continues to be complicit in the killing, imprisonment and dispossession of Palestinian people and the flaunting of international law,â said the Vermont groupâs Kathy Shapiro.
The Israeli foreign ministry called Ben & Jerryâs decision âa surrender to ongoing and aggressive pressure from extreme anti-Israel groupsâ and the company was cooperating with âeconomic terrorism.â
âThe decision is immoral and discriminatory, as it singles out Israel, harms both Israelis and Palestinians and encourages extremist groups who use bullying tactics,â the ministry said in a statement. It also called on Ben & Jerryâs to withdraw its decision.
While Ben & Jerryâs products will not be sold in the settlements, the company said it will stay in Israel through a different arrangement. But doing so will be difficult. Major Israeli supermarket chains, the primary distribution channel for the ice cream maker, all operate in the settlements.
Founded in Vermont in 1978, but currently owned by consumer goods conglomerate Unilever, Ben & Jerryâs has not shied away from social causes. While many businesses tread lightly in politics for fear of alienating customers, the ice cream maker has taken the opposite approach, often espousing progressive causes.
Ben & Jerryâs took a stand against what it called the Trump administrationâs regressive policies by rebranding one of its flavors Pecan Resist in 2018, ahead of midterm elections.
The company said Pecan Resist celebrated activists who were resisting oppression, harmful environmental practices and injustice. As part of the campaign, Ben & Jerryâs said it was giving $25,000 each to four activist entities.
Aida Touma-Sliman, an Israeli lawmaker with the Joint List of Arab parties, wrote on Twitter that Ben and Jerryâs decision Monday was âappropriate and moral.â She added that the âoccupied territories are not part of Israelâ and that the move is an important step to help pressure the Israeli government to end the occupation.
The West Bank and east Jerusalem were captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war. Some 700,000 Israeli settlers now live in the two territories â" roughly 500,000 in the occupied West Bank and 200,000 in east Jerusalem.
AdvertisementIsrael treats the two areas separately, considering east Jerusalem as part of its capital. Meanwhile, Israel considers the West Bank as disputed territory whose fate should be resolved in negotiations. However the international community considers both areas to be occupied territory. The Palestinians seek the West Bank as part of a future independent state, with east Jerusalem as their capital.
Israel in recent years has become a partisan issue in Washington, with many Democrats â" particularly of the partyâs progressive wing â" growing increasingly critical over a number of Israeli policies, including settlement construction, and former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuâs close ties with former President Trump. Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders has been an outspoken critic of Israel.
The BDS movement â" shorthand for a grassroots, Palestinian-led movement that advocates boycotts, divestment and sanctions against Israeli institutions and businesses â" applauded Ben & Jerryâs decision as âa decisive step towards ending the companyâs complicity in Israelâs occupation and violations of Palestinian rights,â but called upon the company to do more.
âWe hope that Ben & Jerryâs has understood that, in harmony with its social justice commitments, there can be no business as usual with apartheid Israel,â a statement read.
The Israeli government says the BDS movement masks a deeper aim of delegitimizing or even destroying the entire country.
The Yesha Council, an umbrella group representing the roughly 500,000 Israelis living in West Bank settlements, said âthereâs no need to buy products from companies that boycott hundreds of thousands of Israeli citizens because of the place they choose to live.â It said Ben & Jerryâs decision âbrought a bad spirit to such a sweet industryâ and called on Israelis to buy locally produced ice cream this summer.
Ben & Jerryâs move on Monday may not be the final chapter in the saga. Airbnb announced in 2018 that it would stop advertising properties in Israeli settlements. Several months later, after coming under harsh criticism from Israel and a federal lawsuit by Israeli Americans who owned property in the settlements, the company reversed its decision.
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Federman reported from Jerusalem. Associated Press reporters Lisa Rathke in Marshfield, Vermont, and Ilan Ben Zion in Jerusalem contributed to this report.
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