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The Israeli military
aggressions against the Palestinian areas are slammed by Swedish
public figures
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Additional
Reporting by Yahia Abu Zakaria, IOL Staff
STOCKHOLM, January
18 (IslamOnline) – A group of Swedish luminaries and public figures
called for a boycott of Israeli goods produced in occupied Palestinian
territories, in a show of protest at the Jewish state's policy of
continued aggressions against the innocent Palestinians.
In an article
published in Sweden's largest daily on Saturday, January 18, a group of
73 Swedish public figures urged the boycott as a means to pressure
Israel into dismantling the Jewish settlements and alleviating the
suffering of the Palestinian people living under the relentless Israeli
occupation.
"We call on
citizens, non-governmental organizations, unions, consumer cooperatives,
political parties and companies to boycott all goods from the illegal
Israeli settlements," the group was quoted by Agence France-Presse (AFP)
as writing in Dagens Nyheter.
All
Jewish settlements, including those
labeled by the Israeli government as “illegal”, are considered illegal
by the international community according to many UN resolutions.
"To buy and sell
goods from the occupied territories is to actively support the illegal
Israeli occupation," they said, adding: "It is also a crime against
international law."
The group, which
included Left Party leader Gudrun Schyman as well as writers,
publishers, doctors and professors, urged the international community to
act since the Israelis and Palestinians have proven "unable to resolve
the conflict on their own".
They called for a
halt to the European Union's free trade agreement with Israel.
"The agreement
contains statutes on respecting human rights and democracy. As long as
Israel fails to show respect for life, freedom of movement and property,
the trade deal should be suspended," they said.
The call has been
earlier made by many prominent figures here, one of whom was Swedish
Foreign Minister Anna Lindh.
Lindh, a member of
the Social Democrats, called on the European Union member states in
their April meeting in Brussels to cut relations with Israel in protest
to the repressive practices of its occupation forces against the
Palestinians.
Also,
Sweden’s young
Social Democrats pressed the need to take a legal action against Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon for war crimes violations.
While the group acknowledged that "both
sides must respect human rights, the Geneva convention and international
law", it stressed that the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza
Strip "represents a permanent violence and a crime against international
law that has continued for more than three decades."
"The occupation is
the root cause that triggered the Palestinian Intifada," or uprising
against Israeli occupation in 2000, it said.
The statement was
also signed by the Swedish ambassador to Germany Carl Tham and
Archbishop KG Hammar.
Tham under attack
But the move inflamed
the anger of the Swedish opposition parties who called for the
resignation of Tham after he voiced support for the boycott of Israeli
goods produced in the occupied Palestinian territories.
The Christian
Democratic Party, the conservative Moderate Party and the Liberal Party
all protested Tham's involvement in the article.
"I believe Carl Tham
should resign as Swedish ambassador to Germany," Jan Bjoerklund, deputy
chairman of the Liberal Party, told Swedish news agency TT.
"Either he is
speaking on behalf of the foreign ministry or, as ambassador, is running
his own foreign policy. Now it is up to Foreign Minister Anna Lindh and
Prime Minister Goeran Persson to say whether they agree with Carl Tham,"
Christian Democratic leader Alf Svensson said.
Moderate Party leader
Bo Lundgren concurred, saying he never supported Tham's appointment as
ambassador.
"A Swedish ambassador
should not make these kinds of statements. That is the government's
business. My earlier belief that he should not have been named
ambassador was correct," he said.
Lindh told Swedish
television news program Aktuellt that she did not support the
idea of a boycott against Israel, which she said would make efforts to
reach a peace agreement with the Palestinians even more difficult.
But she didn’t
criticize Tham, saying: "Of course ambassadors have the right to speak
out on foreign policy issues".
Carl Tham told
Swedish radio Ekot he did not understand the criticism and the
calls for his resignation.
"That would mean
that as soon as a civil servant expresses himself the government would
have to give its approval. That is unconstitutional and flies in the
face of all reasonable practice," he said.