Jerusalem - The European Union’s ambassador to Israel lashed out at government officials and right-wing critics who have accused Brussels of “boycotting” Israeli products by labeling those produced in settlements.
Speaking at The Jerusalem Post Diplomatic Conference, Lars Faaborg-Andersen took exception to comparisons made by Israeli government officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, between the recent initiative to place sticker labels on settlement products and the Nazi boycott of Jewish shops and products in the 1930s.
“Talks of a European boycott does not stand up to a reality check,” Faaborg-Andersen said. “Europe is not boycotting Israel and Europe is not boycotting settlement products. Products from the settlements will continue to enter the EU market.”
The ambassador said that the European initiative is no different than US policy, which makes a clear distinction between products produced by companies on either side of the Green Line.
“It is simply not permissible to write ‘Made in Israel’ on products from Israeli settlements,” Faaborg-Andersen said.
The ambassador noted that the European position is consistent with that of the Israeli government, which has never officially claimed that the West Bank is sovereign Israeli territory.
He also said that any attempt to draw parallels between the EU’s labeling directives and the Nazi boycott of Jewish goods and shops are tantamount to a “distortion of history and a belittlement of the crimes of the Nazis and the memories of their victims.”
The envoy wondered aloud “how Israel can be committed to a two-state solution while still building settlements?”
Faaborg-Andersen praised Israeli-European cooperation and the burgeoning trade between the two sides, citing the closer ties as evidence that “there is no boycott.”
The ambassador was preceded on the dais by Caroline Glick, The Jerusalem Post’s contributing editor who accused Europe of “waging a trade war” against Israel by adopting the labeling directives.
Content is provided courtesy of the Jerusalem Post