*** From [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Tomasz Iwanowski)

La Voz de Aztlan Preface
--------------------------------
La Voz de Aztlan is being increasingly quoted by
the world media. The article below is written by
award-winning London based journalist
Felicity Arbuthnot. She quotes statements made
by our Editor-in-Chief, Ernesto Cienfuegos, concerning
threats made to La Voz de Aztlan because of our
participation in the "Boycott Israeli Products
Campaign".  American Jews have managed to have
their congressional lackeys pass two laws
that make it illegal for U.S. citizens to participate
in boycotts against Israel that are also endorsed by
certain Arab nations.  Jews are increasingly
"corraling" American freedoms and especially after
the September 11 attacks by unknown, possibly
Zionist, terrorists.
----------------------------------------------------------

Call to Boycott Israeli Goods Faces Threats

May 21, 2002

by
Felicity Arbuthnot
The Herald (Harare)

Trade unions and campaigners around the world are
urging a global boycott of Israeli goods to protest
the Jewish state's violence against the Palestinian
people.

Among them are Jewish organisations too - such as the
Israeli human rights group B'Tselem and prominent
individual Jews who are rejecting Israeli policy and
saying "not in our name".

 But some of them are being threatened with violence
 by pro-Israeli activists who on 11 May attacked
 organisations maintaining stalls in support of Iraq
 and Palestine in several British cities, including
 Manchester, Leeds and Cambridge.

The police were summoned when the threats became
abrasive.

Britain's biggest trade union Unison has now been
joined by Christian Aid, one of the country's largest
international non-governmental organisations, in
urging British MPs to demand the suspension of the
European Union-Israel Association Agreement.

This agreement which came into force on 1 June 2000,
is an extensive free trade arrangement that
liberalises goods and services, permits free movement
of capital and economic, social, political and
cultural co-operation.

Europe accounts for 23 percent of Israeli exports, and
40 percent of Israel's imports are from Europe.

They have also called on the minister of state at the
Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Peter Hain, to
endorse this at the European Union-US Summit held in
Washington in early May and the EU-Mediterranean
Summit in Spain in late April.

But nothing happened. Hain, a prominent campaigner for
economic sanctions against South Africa's apartheid
regime in his youth, now holds government office and
Britain toes the line of most Western administrations
sympathetic to Israel.

When the European Parliament voted for suspension of
the EU-Israel Association Agreement in April, a
foreign office spokesman in London said: "Sanctions
won't help; we should use our influence with both
parties."

Labour MP Lynn Jones has tabled an Early Day Motion in
parliament supporting Christian Aid's call for an end
to the agreement.

Even some big manufacturers, such as Texas Exports, an
American auto parts exporter, are willing to put
pressure on Israel.

"We will not do business with Israeli citizens at this
time," Texas Exports chief executive officer John
Harris wrote to an Israeli business in April. "We urge
you to reign in your military and stop your oppression
of the Palestinian people. Your country has lost the
respect of the civilized world."

The letter resulted in Harris receiving hundreds of
telephone calls and death threats.

Pro-Israeli organisations that outnumber protestors on
many US university campuses hit back accusing
lobbyists of dubious motives.

The boycott lobby's goal, David Livshiz, a member of
the American Movement for Israel told the New York
Times, is to "get Israel disliked, to see it as a
racist, horrible regime (and Palestine) as a trendy
cause".

Christian Aid also came under attack. Fiona McCauley,
public affairs director of the Board of Deputies of
British Jews dismissed the boycott call, saying, "We
are appalled at the statement by Christian Aid which
is absolutely outside their remit. Further they have
completely omitted any historic(al) perspective."

Israel, she says, has suffered 12 500 acts of
terrorism in the last 18 months.

Across the Atlantic, the boycott of Israeli goods can
cost US citizens dearly. On this issue even protesting
can be an offence.

In the mid-1970s the US adopted two punitive laws to
counteract the participation of US citizens in
economic boycotts and embargoes.

The 1977 amendments to the Export Administration Act
and the Ribicoff Amendment to the 1976 Tax Reform Act,
forbid US citizens from participating in them. Refusal
to do business with Israel may result in a fine of up
to US$50 000 and five years' imprisonment or five
times the value of exports involved - whichever is the
greater.

The updated Emergency Economic Powers Act of November
2000 threatens imprisonment of up to 10 years for
"willful violation".

La Voz de Aztlan, a California-based pro-boycott
online news service, told Gemini News Service that its
research identified several powerful multi-national
companies and key figures in them supporting Israel.

It says cosmetic giant Estee Lauder's chairman Ronald
Lauder served as chairman of the Conference of Major
American Jewish Organisations and is current president
of the Jewish National Fund that endorses Israeli
policy on Palestine.

Robert P. Van der Merwe, Europe, Middle East and
Africa president of Kimberley Clark, whose products
range from cleaners to skincare and protective
clothing, received in 1998 the Jubilee Award - the
highest tribute awarded by Israel - for his
contribution to strengthening the Israeli economy. The
tribute was presented by then Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu.

Coca Cola was honoured by the government this year for
its 30 years of support of Israel and refusal to abide
by the Arab League boycott.

Nestl. of Switzerland is moving to Sderot, a town in
Israel's Negev desert, according to the 21 April issue
of the Israeli newspaper Maariv, to develop a global
research and development centre for snack foods.
Nestl. co-owns Israeli food producer Osem Investments.

Intel, producer of Pentium processors, Adobe and
others, has a 28-year-old plant at Qiryat Gat built on
land confiscated from the Palestinian village of Iraq
al Manshiya which had 2 000 people living in 300
houses, with two mosques and a school. The village was
razed to the ground.

Now the organisation that compiled the list says it is
facing death threats from pro-Israeli groups and
individuals. "I would continue to speak out, but I
have the safety and well-being of my staff to consider,"
commented its chief executive.

-------------------------------------------------------
About the author: Felicity Arbuthnot is an
award-winning campaigning journalist based
in London.

*************************************
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Forwarded by La Voz de Aztlan
http://www.aztlan.net



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