Belgium pushes for labeling products from West Bank settlements

The recommendation has nothing to do with escalating conflict between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip, the Belgian Economics Ministry says.

Employees pack boxes of the SodaStream product at the factory in the West Bank. (photo credit: REUTERS)
Employees pack boxes of the SodaStream product at the factory in the West Bank.
(photo credit: REUTERS)
BRUSSELS - Belgium advised retailers on Tuesday to clearly label the origin of products made in Israeli settlements that are in territories where Palestinians seek statehood.
The non-binding recommendation has nothing to do with escalating conflict between Israel and Palestinian terrorists in the Gaza Strip, the Belgian Economics Ministry said, noting that Britain and Denmark already had similar labeling in place.
"It's a non-binding advice to state on labels that products originating from occupied territories come from there," a ministry spokeswoman said. "We don't see this as a sanction against Israel, but EU rules stipulate that consumers have to be informed of the origins of products."
The ministry planned to send a letter to retail federations on Tuesday recommending the use of such labels. Belgian retail federation Comeos and the Israeli Embassy in Brussels said they would not comment before the letter was issued.
Israel has been critical of any move to label produce from Jewish settlements clearly or distinguish them from goods produced by Palestinians, arguing that the distinction is part of a larger effort to impose a Palestinian state on Israel.
The labels Belgium has in mind would mainly apply to fruit and vegetables grown in Jewish settlements in the Jordan Valley of the West Bank. But they could include products such as sparkling water made by SodaStream and cosmetics by Ahava which both have production facilities in the West Bank.
Palestinians have limited self-rule in areas of the West Bank not taken up by Israeli settlements.
Palestinians want to establish a state in the West Bank and Gaza with east Jerusalem as their capital, but the latest round of US-brokered peace talks collapsed in April. Palestinians fear the settlements, which the European Union views as illegal and an obstacle to peace, will deny them a viable country.
Israel took the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem in a 1967 war. More than 500,000 Jews now live in settlements in the West Bank and east Jerusalem alongside some 3 million Palestinians. Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip in 2005.