UK activists boycott Israel 
UK will import many of its Valentines flowers from Israel 
Saturday, 07, Feb 2009 12:03
By Laura Miller 
Demonstrators are planning nationwide protests today to boycott the sale of 
Israeli goods on UK high-streets. 
The national Boycott Israeli Goods (BIG) campaign, led by a coalition of 
pro-Palestine and anti-war groups, aims to impact on Valentines Day sales of 
flowers, many of which Israel exports to the UK. 
David Wilson, spokesperson for Stop the War, one of the groups supporting the 
campaign, told politics.co.uk: "Valentines Day is the perfect day for love to 
all, and for people to remember those suffering abroad." 
He compared the action to the boycott of South African goods during apartied. 
"Apartied herded one people into a caged area of the country. What is Gaza if 
it's not comparable to that?" he said. 
The largest protest is expected in Middlesex at Carmel-Agrexco, the Israeli 
national exporter of fruit and vegetables and importer of large quantities of 
flowers to the UK. 
All the large supermarket chains will be targeted, as well as Barlays bank and 
Marks and Spencers, which has incurred heavy criticism in the past from 
pro-Palestine campaigners over claims the company's owner, Phillip Green, 
supports Israel through business deals and investments. 
Speaking to politics.co.uka spokesperson for M & S denied claims the chain has 
a political interest in importing goods from Israel. 
"We don't have a special relationship with Israel, we have a relationship with 
individual farmers," she said. 
"At the moment we don't even source very much from Israel, maybe ten out of 500 
lines." 
Palestine Solidarity Campaign, one of the main organisers of today's protests, 
is also backed in the BIG campaign by the Jewish Boycott Israeli Goods group. 
Mark Gardner of the Community Security Trust, an organisation that acts to 
prevent and record violence against British Jews, said that while Jewish 
participation in the BIG campaign helped represent the community's diversity, 
it also added to the negative affect such campaigns have on British Jews. 
"British Jews have no control or influence over what's happening in the Middle 
East. Campaigns like this can have the best motives in the world but it doesn't 
change the negative impact of the Jewish community," he told politics.co.uk. 
"The involvement of a small number of vocal Jews allows others to point the 
finger at the large silent, blameless majority. This affects Jewish morale, 
because it encourages people to regard Jews as moral reprobabtes." 
Outside No 10 Downing Street on Sunday a separate protest, "Children for the 
Children of Gaza", has been organised to show solidarity with the children in 
Gaza and Palestine on the whole. 


      

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