France published guidelines in 2016 saying products from Israeli settlements in the West Bank and Golan Heights must carry labels making their precise origin clear (AFP Photo/HAZEM BADER) |
Brussels (AFP) - The EU's top court ruled Tuesday that food products from occupied Palestinian territories must be labelled as such, drawing an angry response from Israel which slammed a "double standard".
The
European Court of Justice said that under EU rules on food labelling, it must
be clear where products are from -- particularly if they come from Israeli
settlements.
That way,
it said, consumers can make choices based on "ethical considerations and
considerations relating to the observance of international law".
The ECJ
ruling effectively backs the EU guidelines issued in 2015 on labelling goods
from Israeli-occupied areas, which also prompted a furious response. At the
time, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu compared them to the Nazi boycott of
Jewish businesses.
The
Luxembourg-based court ruled after France's top tribunal asked for clarification
of rules on labelling goods from the West Bank, including annexed east
Jerusalem, which the international community considers occupied Palestinian
land, as well as the Golan Heights, which Israel took from Syria in 1967.
"Foodstuffs
originating in the territories occupied by the State of Israel must bear the
indication of their territory of origin, accompanied, where those foodstuffs
come from an Israeli settlement within that territory, by the indication of
that provenance," said an ECJ statement announcing its decision.
France
published guidelines in 2016 saying products from Israeli settlements in the
West Bank and Golan Heights must carry labels making their precise origin
clear.
This was
challenged by the Organisation Juive Europeene (European Jewish Organisation)
and Psagot, a company that runs vineyards in occupied territories.
Israel's
foreign ministry issued a statement Tuesday saying it "strongly
rejects" the ruling.
"The
ruling's entire objective is to single out and apply a double standard against
Israel," it said.
"There
are over 200 ongoing territorial disputes across the world, yet the (European
Court of Justice) has not rendered a single ruling related to the labelling of
products originating from these territories."
But a
spokeswoman for the European Commission, the EU's executive arm, insisted the
ruling "does not concern products from Israel itself". It would not
affect the privileged trading status the Jewish state has under its association
agreement with the bloc, she added.
"The
EU does not support any form of boycott or sanctions against Israel and the EU
rejects attempts by the campaigns of the so-called Boycott, Divestment,
Sanctions (BDS) movement to isolate Israel," spokeswoman Mina Andreeva said.
Elsewhere,
the secretary general of the Palestine Liberation Organisation, Saeb Erekat,
welcomed the ruling but urged the EU to go further.
"Our
demand is not only for the correct labelling reflecting the certificate of
origin of products coming from illegal colonial settlements, but for the
banning of those products from international markets."
'Ethical
considerations'
The court
said that labelling products as from the "State of Israel" when in
fact they come from "territories... occupied by that State" could
mislead consumers.
The court
added that EU regulations on labelling the origin of goods were intended to
allow consumers to make "informed choices" -- not just on health,
economic, environmental and social grounds, "but also to ethical considerations
and considerations relating to the observance of international law".
"Such
considerations could influence consumers' purchasing decisions," the ECJ
said.
On the
issue of Israeli settlements, the court said "they give concrete
expression to a policy of population transfer conducted by that State outside
its territory, in violation of the rules of general international humanitarian
law".
Consumers
might be misled if it was not made clear that products originated in these
settlements, the court added.
But
Francois-Henri Briard, the lawyer for Psagot, condemned the ruling, saying it
catered to "political prejudices".
"If
such labelling is applied to Israeli products, surely it will also need to be
applied to scores of other countries around the world who could be argued to be
in violation of international law," he said in a statement.
Francois
Kalifat of the CRIF umbrella association of French Jewish groups called the
ruling "discriminatory and intolerable".
He said it
would strengthen the BDS movement, which calls for a broad-ranging boycott of
Israel over its treatment of the Palestinians.
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