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		  following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may 
		  also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. 
		  Comments are in parentheses. |  
       
      
        British Court Considers Selling Israeli 
		Products Illegal, in Violation of International Law, Acquits 4 
		Anti-Apartheid Activists
 
 
 4 British activists acquitted in anti-Ahava action Sunday August 22, 2010 02:08 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC News
		
		 A British court has found 4 activists not guilty of 'aggravated 
		trespass' for an action in which they shut down a store selling Israeli 
		dead sea beauty products. The court ruled that the company in question, 
		Ahava Beauty, was engaged in illegal activity by selling the products in 
		violation of international law.
 The case sets an interesting 
		precedent for campaigners of the worldwide Boycott-Divestment-Sanctions 
		campaign, which aims to end the Israeli occupation of Palestine and 
		discriminatory practices by Israel which they call 'apartheid' and 
		compare to the former South African regime.
 
 The four activists 
		rolled barrels inside the Ahava Beauty products store in two separate 
		actions in September and December 2009, locking their arms inside the 
		barrels and forcing the store to close while police came to cut open the 
		barrels and arrest the activists.
 
 According to the British 
		boycott campaign, “Every other weekend there is a small demonstration 
		held outside Ahava, an Israeli-owned beauty and cosmetic store in 
		London's trendy Covent Garden. It is held to protest against the sale of 
		beauty products which are made in the illegal Israeli settlement of 
		Mitzpe Shalem in the Occupied West Bank and made with mud taken from the 
		Dead Sea near Kaliya. This happens without the permission of, or 
		compensation for, the Palestinians to whom the land truly belongs.”
 
 According to the Dead Sea agreement, Israel and the Palestinian 
		Authority should both have access to the Dead Sea. But Israel has 
		complete control over the Dead Sea (despite the fact that it borders the 
		West Bank), and have prevented the Palestinian people from accessing the 
		sea or selling Dead Sea products. The Ahava Dead Sea beauty products are 
		taken from the Dead Sea on the Palestinian side of the border, and in 
		this way the company violates international law and signed agreements 
		between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.
 
 And the British 
		Government's own DEFRA guidelines from 2009 state, "the government 
		considers that traders would be misleading consumers, and would 
		therefore almost certainly be committing an offence, if they were to 
		declare produce from the [Occupied Palestinian Territories] (including 
		from the West Bank) as ‘Produce of Israel…' This is because the area 
		does not fall within the internationally recognised borders of the state 
		of Israel."
 
 The Boycott-Divestment-Sanctions campaign declared 
		the court ruling a victory, and vowed to continue their campaign against 
		Ahava, using this ruling as a precedent.
 
 
 
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