by AP and Israel Hayom Staff
If passed, Ireland would become first European country to ban import of settlement goods
The Irish Senate
has voted in favor of a bill seeking to ban the import of West Bank
settlement products – a measure that still must pass several hurdles
before becoming law.
Under the legislation, violators who import
goods from "illegal settlements" in the Golan Heights, Judea and
Samaria, will be fined. If passed, Ireland will become the first
European country to ban Israeli settlement goods.
Irish Senators voted 25 to 20 Wednesday in
favor of the proposal, which still needs to be debated and voted on in
Parliament's Lower House – a process that is expected to take months.
The Irish government strongly opposes the measure, arguing for a common European Union response.
The bill's author, independent senator
Frances Black, has termed Israeli settlements "a gross violation of
international law" and compared her initiative to Ireland's efforts to
combat apartheid in South Africa.
"There is a clear hypocrisy here – how can
we condemn the settlements as 'unambiguously illegal' as theft of land
and resources, but happily buy the proceeds of this crime?" the Irish
Times quoted her as saying.
Israel's Foreign Ministry sharply condemned the vote and summoned the Irish ambassador for a meeting Thursday.
Ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nahshon said
Wednesday that "the Irish Senate has lent a hand to a populist,
dangerous and extreme anti-Israel boycott initiative, effectively
undermining the dialogue between Israel and the Palestinians."
"The boycott will affect the livelihood of
many Palestinians who work in Israeli industrial zones, and they will be
hurt by this initiative," Nahshon continued. "It will only cause damage
to the diplomatic process in the Middle East."
Irish Ambassador to Israel Alison Kelly has
already been summoned by the Foreign Ministry twice before. In January
she was summoned when the initiative was first submitted and spoke with
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. She insisted at the time that the
bill was not motivated by the BDS movement, but Netanyahu reprimanded
her, telling her that she was supporting those who seek to boycott
Israel.
Kelly was also summoned to the Foreign
Ministry in April to be reprimanded over Dublin Lord Mayor Micheal Mac
Donncha's participation in an anti-Israel symposium that was held in
Ramallah, and over two anti-Israel resolutions passed in the Dublin City
Council.
AP and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/2018/07/12/irish-senate-passes-bill-banning-israeli-settlement-goods/
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