Aug 13, 2010

AJJP Endorses U.S. Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel

Responding to the call of Palestinian civil society to join the Boycott, Divestment and Sanction movement against Israel, American Jews for a Just Peace (AJJP) joins a U.S. campaign focused specifically on a boycott of Israeli academic and cultural institutions, as delineated by the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI).

PACBI states:

"In light of Israel’s persistent violations of international law, and Given that, since 1948, hundreds of UN resolutions have condemned Israel's colonial and discriminatory policies as illegal and called for immediate, adequate and effective remedies, and Given that all forms of international intervention and peace-making have until now failed to convince or force Israel to comply with humanitarian law, to respect fundamental human rights and to end its occupation and oppression of the people of Palestine, and In view of the fact that people of conscience in the international community have historically shouldered the moral responsibility to fight injustice, as exemplified in the struggle to abolish apartheid in South Africa through diverse forms of boycott, divestment and sanctions;

"Inspired by the struggle of South Africans against apartheid and in the spirit of international solidarity, moral consistency and resistance to injustice and oppression, We, representatives of Palestinian civil society, call upon international civil society organizations and people of conscience all over the world to impose broad boycotts and implement divestment initiatives against Israel similar to those applied to South Africa in the apartheid era."

For more information: http://www.pacbi.org/campaign_statement.htm


Consumer group rejects Israel boycott call

The Swedish Cooperative Union (Kooperativa förbundet - KF) has ruled out calls from a regional member group to stop selling goods from Israel in Coop stores.

"KF's and Coop's criteria in selecting suppliers pays no heed to nationality. According to KF policy a boycott of trade with individual countries is determined by Sweden's government and parliament or the EU and/or the UN," KF wrote in a statement on Sunday.

Three resolutions urging a ban on Israeli products were approved by a majority of the 425 members in attendance at Saturday's annual meeting in Gothenburg of the consumer cooperative society for western Sweden, Konsumentföreningen Väst (KF Väst). The resolutions cited Israel's role in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as grounds for a boycott.

"The board will now push the issue of a boycott to the other Swedish consumer cooperatives," said chairperson Carina Malmer in a statement.

KF Väst is one of the largest of the 47 consumer cooperative societies that make up the Swedish Cooperative Union, which has more than 3 million members.

The Swedish Cooperative Union owns the Coop chain of supermarkets. According to the union's own figures, the retail consumer cooperative societies and Coop together account for 21.4 percent of the grocery retail sector in Sweden.

Dempsey calls for Israel boycott

Singer-songwriter Damien Dempsey has called on artists around the world to stand in solidarity with the people of Palestine.

The Dubliner backed about 150 Irish creative and performing artists who have already signed a pledge to boycott Israel until it ends its blockade of Gaza.

Dempsey said he believed the recent commando attack on the aid flotilla brought home the lawlessness of Israeli forces, saying: "What's going on in Palestine is very wrong. We have a long history of oppression so I think anybody else who's being oppressed, we should have a duty. And as artists we yield a bit more power than ordinary people."

He continued: "We have a duty to speak out and do something about it. I just want to make a stand for the Palestinians and show them some solidarity and show them they're not alone."

Olympia Food Co-op: Israeli product boycott debate cordial, passionate mideast

OLYMPIA – About 300 people filled Olympia Center on Thursday night for a passionate debate on a recent controversial decision by the Olympia Food Co-op board to boycott Israeli-made products.


Nine of the 10 board members were at the meeting, and co-op members and nonmembers lined up early for the 6 p.m. start. By 5:30 p.m., more than 100 people stood in line; some had arrived as early as 3 p.m., said Dr. Muhammad Ayub, who spoke in support of the boycott. Ayub said he arrived at that time and was the fourth person in line.


Public testimony didn’t get under way until 7 p.m., and it wasn’t clear whether the meeting would extend beyond its scheduled completion time of 8:30 p.m.


Maralise Quan, executive director of the Pierce County Dispute Resolution Center, spelled out the ground rules and set the tone for the meeting. She asked for tolerance and that no speaker be disrespected. Rather than applaud, she asked that people show their support for a speaker by waving their hands in the air.


One by one, board members introduced themselves to the audience, but only board member Ron Lavigne spoke at length, saying the board understood its decision would be controversial but was there “to address the hurt and anger and to try and heal the community.”



Pro-Israel shoppers defy Ahava products boycott call

PA to continue settlement goods boycott

Israeli, PA economic ministers meet for first time in 5 years.


Industry, Trade and Labor Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer met with his Palestinian counterpart, National Economy Minister Hassan Abu Libda, in Tel Aviv on Thursday.

The ministers spoke about economic and trade issues between Israel and the Palestinian Authority. This was the first meeting between an Israeli industry, trade and labor minister and his Palestinian counterpart in five years.

Sources who attended the meeting reported that Ben- Eliezer had expressed frustration over the PA’s intention to pass a law making it illegal for Palestinians to work in Israeli-owned businesses in the
West Bank. Ben-Eliezer told Abu Libda that he had instructed his ministry’s director-general, Sharon Kadmi, to prepare special aid to assist the Israeli factories in replacing the Palestinian workers with Israelis.

Ben-Eliezer also spoke to Abu Libda about the Palestinian consumer boycott of settlement- made products, which Abu Libda said his government was adamant about keeping in place despite Israeli threats.

According to the ministry spokesman, Abu Libda asked for Israel’s assistance in gaining observer status at the World Trade Organization.

Global conference passes RMT anti-Israel motion

The RMT transport union has passed a motion condemning Israel at an international conference representing more than 4,600,000 union members.

The resolution, voted for by delegates at the annual International Transport Federation (ITF) conference, calls for action on “illegal Israeli settlements”.

The RMT, which is led by Bob Crow, seconded the motion proposed by the Palestinian General Federation of Trade Unions (PGFTU) at the Mexico event.

It calls for transport workers to halt the movement of people and goods into the Palestinian Territories.

The ITF is the umbrella organisation for more than 750 transport unions in 155 countries around the world.

In June, the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) rejected calls to boycott Israel and pledged its “universal recognition” of the country’s right to exist.

But trade unions around the world have been vocal in calling for divestment and sanctionson Israel.

Earlier in 2010 Britain’s largest union, Unite, unanimously passed a motion calling for a boycott of Israeli companies, while the University and College Union supported several anti-Israel resolutions at its national conference.

150 Irish artists pledge to boycott Israel

A CULTURAL boycott of Israel was launched yesterday, with more than 150 Irish artists announcing that they intend not to perform or exhibit in Israel, or to accept any funding from institutions linked to the Israeli government.

The Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign (IPSC) said it was in protest at Israel’s “treatment of the Palestinian people”.

Raymond Deane of the IPSC cited a statement from the Israeli Foreign Ministry in 2005 saying they considered culture a propaganda tool.

He said: “Artists who perform there are backing it [the Israeli government] whether they like it or not.”

The pledge signed by the artists states the boycott would continue, “until such time as Israel complies with international law and universal principles of human rights”. Mr Deane said: “You can’t really pin this down”, but it means, “at least an end of the occupation of Palestine; dismantling or at least stopping the settlements; and Israel negotiating in good faith with the Palestinians”.

An Israeli embassy spokesman said the boycott “was regrettable and ill-advised” and that “vilifying and ostracising Israel and promoting a lose-lose programme of boycotts is not the way to secure legitimate Palestinian rights”.

Singer and songwriter Damien Dempsey hoped the boycott would encourage young people in Israel who disagreed with the government to “speak out”.

He said that the military were running the show in Israel and that they needed the world to stand up against them.

Musician Donal Lunny said he was taking part to “express solidarity with the Palestinian people”.

When asked about the boycott’s chances for success, Eoin Dillon, a performer with Irish and world music band Kila, said: “It worked in South Africa.”

Aug 12, 2010

حملات مقاطعة أوروبية قبل رمضان: لا تُفسد صيامك بتمور إسرائيلية!

بلغ السيل الاسرائيلي سعف النخيل وبلحه. نعم نخيل وتمر اسرائيلي أيضاً! هذا ما لا يعرفه كثيرون، خصوصاً مستهلكي التمور في اوروبا، الذين يشكل المسلمون غالبيتهم. لذلك بادرت مجموعة من المؤسسات الداعمة للقضية الفلسطينية، تنشط لمقاطعة البضائع الاسرائيلية، الى حملة متزامنة مع حلول شهر رمضان، وشعارها: إحذروا شراء التمور الاسرائيلية.
وبدأت هذه الحملة في بروكسل، متزامنة مع حملة مماثلة في كل من بريطانيا وهولندا وفرنسا، وستستمر نشاطاتها طوال شهر الصيام. منظموها يقولون إنهم لاحظوا وجود العديد من ماركات التمور، التي تصدرها حكومة الاحتلال الاسرائيلي، تنتشر في الاسواق الاوروبية بالرغم من انها تأتي من مستوطنات اسرائيلية. ويقوم ناشطو الحملة بزيارة العديد من الأماكن المعروفة بكونها ذات غالبية مسلمة في بروكسل، ويوزعون منشورات تحمل صوراً لماركات التمور المراد مقاطعتها.
ومن أبرز هذه الماركات، تلك التي تصدرها شركة «اغركسكو» الاسرائيلية، وتحمل اسم «كرمل»، ويضاف اليها ماركات «جوردن ريفر»، «كينغ سلومن»، «كالاهاري»، «توب» و«كدم». واللافت في ما يقوله نشطاء المقاطعة، إن هذه الماركات تأتي من المستوطنات الاسرائبلية في وادي نهر الأردن. ويشيرون الى أن المستوطنين هناك يعتمدون بشكل أساسي على ريع بيع التمور، ولذلك يؤكدون أن هدفهم هو وقف تصدير هذه التمور الى اوروبا، عبر توعية الزبائن، وبالتالي الضغط على المستوردين كي يوقفوا استيراد التمور الآتية من المستوطنات.
وفي هذا السياق، يبدو أن للمشترين المسلمين دورا بارزا في ذلك، إذ يؤكد مسؤولو الحملة البلجيكية أن 80 في المئة من مستهلكي التمور هم من المسلمين. ومع ذلك يلفت ناشطو المقاطعة الى صعوبة تحديد الإنتاج المقبل من المستوطنات وحصره، مشيرين الى أن بعض الشركات المصدرة للتمور تتعمّد عدم وضع عناوين تجارية تشير الى المستوطنات، وأيضاً ثمة شركات اسرائيلية تأتي بإنتاج المستوطنات وتخلطه بإنتاج أكبر، وتصدّره على ان مصدره واحد.
وبحسب الحملة، فإن حجم التصدير الإسرائيلي من التمور يبلغ حوالى خمسة آلاف طن، ما تقدر قيمته بحوالى 50 مليون يورو. ويركّز نشطاء المقاطعة في حملتهم على عدم شرعية انتاج المستوطنات، انطلاقاً من القانون الدولي الذي يحظر على المحتلّ القيام بنشاط اقتصادي، على الأرض التي يحتلها.

Besieging Israel's siege

In just a few years the Palestinian campaign to boycott Israeli goods has become truly global

Despite Israel's siege of Gaza, and the escalating displacement in the Negev and East Jerusalem, Palestinians have some reason to celebrate. In Washington a food co-op has passed a resolution calling for a boycott of Israeli products, confirming that the boycott movement – five years old last month – has finally crossed the Atlantic. Support for the move came from prominent figures including Nobel peace laureates Desmond Tutu and Máiread Maguire, and Richard Falk, the UN's special rapporteur on the Palestinian territories.

The movement for boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) against Israel was launched in 2005, a year after the international court of justice had found Israel's wall and colonies built on occupied Palestinian territory illegal. Over 170 Palestinian political parties, unions, mass movements and NGOs endorsed the movement, which is led by the BNC, a coalition of civil society organisations.


رسالة مفتوحة إلى أعضاء مجلس جامعة القدس المحترمين

رام الله المحتلة – 10/8/2010: اطّلعت مؤخراً الحملة الفلسطينية للمقاطعة الأكاديمية والثقافية لإسرائيل على خبرين أولهما توقيع جامعة القدس على "برنامج ماجستير يؤسس لعلاقة من التعاون بين جامعات فلسطينية وإسرائيلية برعاية جامعة لا سابيينزا في روما" وبدعم من التعاون الإيطالي في القدس ومنظمة اليونسكو (1). و الخبر الثاني هو رعاية جامعتكم و دعمها لبرنامج في الجامعة العبرية (2) لتدريب طلاب الثانوية من القدس والضفة على مهارات الحاسوب و التجارة MEET.

إن الحملة الفلسطينية للمقاطعة الأكاديمية والثقافية لإسرائيل تنظر بعين الخطورة لهذا النوع من التعاون للأسباب التالية:

1- إن هكذا "تعاون"، وكما ورد في الخبرين المذكورين أعلاه، هو شكل آخر من أشكال العلاقات الأكاديمية بين جامعات فلسطينية وأخرى إسرائيلية والتي تهدد الانجازات الكبيرة التي حققتها الحركة العالمية المتنامية لمقاطعة اسرائيل، بما في ذلك مؤسساتها الأكاديمية. إن إصرار جامعة القدس على العلاقات مع مؤسسات أكاديمية إسرائيلية متواطئة بل وشريكة في إدامة الاحتلال والأبارتهايد يتعارض مع ما يقارب الإجماع(3) في المجتمع المدني الفلسطيني (في الوطن والشتات) في دعم حملة مقاطعة إسرائيل وسحب الاستثمارات منها وفرض العقوبات عليها (BDS) ومعايير المقاطعة والتطبيع المقرة منذ نوفمبر 2007 (4).

2- إن التوقيع على اتفاقيات "تعاون" مع جامعات اسرائيلية سيستخدم – كما حدث في كل مرة -- بكثافة من الآلة الإعلامية الإسرائيلية لمواجهة الضغوط الدولية المتنامية ضد السياسة الإسرائيلية في المنطقة والتي تعمل الحكومة الإسرائيلية بكل الطرق لمقاومتها عبر إظهار أي شكل من أشكال "الحوار" و "التعاون" مع الطرف الفلسطيني كـ"البديل" للمقاطعة.

3- إن توقيعكم يتنافي مع قرار مجلس التعليم العالي الفلسطيني، الذي تلتزم به الجامعات الفلسطينية كافة والذي يمنع بشكل واضح وصريح التعامل مع المؤسسات الأكاديمية الإسرائيلية حتى إنهاء الاحتلال.

4- إننا نرى أن توقيع جامعة القدس على هكذا اتفاقيات يتنافى مع موقف مجلس جامعتكم الشجاع والمقدر، الذي عمم بتاريخ 1/2/2009 والقاضي "بإيقاف مختلف أشكال التعاون الأكاديمي بين الجامعة (جامعة القدس) والمؤسسات الأكاديمية الإسرائيلية، ذلك التعاون الذي يبرره فقط التزام رسمي إسرائيلي بحل منصف للقضية الفلسطينية من جميع جوانبها وحسب جدول زمني مقبول"، والذي جاء رداً على "العدوان الإسرائيلي على قطاع غزة مؤخراً وممارسات وسياسات حكومات إسرائيل المتعاقبة على مدار عشر سنوات ونيف، المتمثلة في الاستيطان وتهويد القدس وإحكام الحصار على المناطق المحتلة، وإحباط أي عمليه سياسيه تفاوضية تتمخض عنها دولة فلسطينية مستقلة تعيش بسلام إلى جانب دولة إسرائيل" (5).

وحيث أن ما استدعى أخذ موقفكم المشار له سابقاً لم يطرأ عليه أي تغيير يذكر، بل إن السياسات الإسرائيلية ضد شعبنا في القدس وغزة والضفة الغربية والنقب ازدادت وحشية وعدوانية، والعملية التفاوضية ثبت عبثيتها واستغلالها لتغطية السياسات الإسرائيلية المتسارعة، خاصة في تهويد القدس وزيادة الاستيطان، فإننا نرى ضرورة مراجعة موقفكم في التوقيع على هذه الاتفاقيات لكي لا تكونوا الفاتحين لباب التطبيع (6) الأكاديمي مرة أخرى.

إن الاستمرار في هذه الاتفاقيات لا بد أن يستدعي موقفاً موحداً من كل مؤسسات المجتمع المدني الفلسطيني وكذلك مجلس التعليم العالي لوقف هكذا خروقات يعارضها ويقف ضدها السواد الأعظم من الشعب الفلسطيني ومن مؤسساته الثقافية والتعليمية المختلفة.

آملين إعادة النظر في توقيعكم على الاتفاقيات المذكورة والتمسك بموقفكم الرسمي الرافض لمثل هذا التعاون مع المؤسسات الإسرائيلية الذي لم يحقق شيئاً لشعبنا وقضيته العادلة بل ساهم في تشتيت الجهود الوطنية وتمييع الأهداف السامية التي يناضل شعبنا من اجلها.

Irish artists make BDS history, issuing the first nation-wide ‘pledge’ to boycott Israeli apartheid

Occupied Ramallah, 11 August 2010

The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) strongly welcomes the Irish artists’ 'pledge’ to boycott Israeli cultural institutions until Israel complies with international law. This pledge not only represents a significant victory for the ethical responsibilities of international cultural figures; a key factor in the cultural boycott of Israel, but is a ground breaking strategy in supporting Palestinian struggle for freedom and justice.

In the last few years, many international cultural figures have come out in support of the cultural boycott of Israel. A statement authored by John Berger in support of the boycott gathered dozens of signatures, including some celebrities. [1] Montreal, Canada, witnessed a most impressive initiative in this respect, where 500 artists issued a statement this last February committing themselves to “fighting against [Israeli] apartheid” and calling upon “all artists and cultural producers across the country and around the world to adopt a similar position in this global struggle” for Palestinian rights. [2] Yet, the Irish artists have raised the bar of solidarity by pioneering the first nation-wide cultural stance in support of the boycott of Israel.

Inspired by the South African anti-apartheid cultural boycott, the Palestinian academic and cultural boycott call [3] has relied entirely onmoral pressure, appealing to the conscience of the artists in question as well as their fans. The main rationale behind this call is that performing in a state that practices occupation, colonization and apartheid, as Israel does, cannot be regarded as a purely artistic act, if any such act exists. Regardless of intentions, such an act is a conscious form of complicity that is manipulated by Israel in its frantic efforts to whitewash its persistent violations of international law and Palestinian rights. This is because artistic performances in Israel promote a “business as usual” attitude that normalizes and sanitizes a state that has persistently committed war crimes over several decades -- in Gaza, Jerusalem, the Naqab (Negev), and most recently, in the high seas against international humanitarian relief workers aboard the Freedom Flotilla.

An artist who performs in Israel today -- just like any artist who violated the boycott and performed in Sun City, South Africa, during apartheid -- can only be seen by Palestinians and people of conscience around the world as motivated by profit and personal gain far more than by moral principles. We realize that Israeli concert promoters offer large sums of money to lure international performers as part of the Foreign Ministry-run “Brand Israel”[4] campaign, designed explicitly to hide Israel’s criminal violations of human rights under a guise of artistic and scientific glamour and a deceptive image of cultural excellence and “liberalism.” But we hope artists will resist the temptation and assert the primacy of human rights and justice over financial reward. Within this context, the main impact of the boycott at this stage is to expose Israel as a pariah, to increase its isolation, thus raising the price of its injustices against the Palestinian people and challenging international complicity in perpetuating its occupation and apartheid.

The Palestinian academic and cultural boycott movement has not witnessed a sustained surge in cultural boycott of Israel such as has occurred in the last year and a half, since the Israeli war of aggression on Gaza. Today, major performing artists are cancelling concerts in Israel and world bestselling authors are endorsing BDS. [5] With this growth, the movement is showing more signs of its potential to transform international opinion in much the way that the divestment movement isolated the South African apartheid regime. In 1965, the American Committee on Africa, following the lead of prominent British arts associations, sponsored a historic declaration against South African apartheid, signed by more than 60 cultural personalities. It read: "We say no to apartheid. We take this pledge in solemn resolve to refuse any encouragement of, or indeed, any professional association with the present Republic of South Africa, this until the day when all its people shall equally enjoy the educational and cultural advantages of that rich and beautiful land." [6] A year before that, in 1964, the Irish Anti-Apartheid Movement promoted a declaration signed by 28 Irish playwrights that they would not permit their work to be performed before segregated audiences in South Africa. [7] Today, Irish and Canadian artists have opened up the way for achieving the same level of commitment from international artists in isolating apartheid Israel.

The great majority of Palestinian cultural figures stand solidly behind the call for a cultural boycott of Israel, [8] as do all the main cultural institutions and associations. Palestinian artists often express the commonly held view that world artists have a moral obligation to uphold universal principles of human rights and justice in order to help end this multi-tiered oppression against the Palestinians. Irish artists have today taken a historic step in enhancing the movement that would exert effective pressure on Israel and bring about freedom and just peace. For that, we salute these principled and ethically responsible Irish artists.

PACBI

Egyptian minister calls on Muslims to flood J’lem

Arab pilgrims seen as more effective than the failed boycott.


Egyptian Minister of Religious Endowments Mahmoud Hamdi Zaqzouq has called onMuslims worldwide to visit Jerusalem and assert its Islamic identity.

In an interview with the London- based pan-Arab daily
Asharq Al-Awsat, Zaqzouq attacked the traditional Arab policy of tourism boycott against the Jewish state. He warned that Israel’s building in the city could smother Islamic sites.


“I say to those who insist on not visiting [Jerusalem] before its liberation: My worst fear is that you will have nothing to visit after Israel realizes its plans in Jerusalem and elsewhere,” Zaqzouq was quoted as saying.

Zaqzouq said his tactic of urging a worldwide convergence on Jerusalem could be used to expose any subsequent Israeli hypocrisy, should the government refuse to grant them entry permits. He said Muslims could then turn to the international community claiming religious discrimination.

“This would produce powerful leverage, in lieu of the current negative Islamic boycott,” he said. “We are wrong to define Jerusalem as a Palestinian issue. Rather, it is a purely Islamic issue concerning 1.5 billion Muslims.”

Aug 11, 2010

عمر بشير: هذا ليس تطبيعاً

نجل معلّم العود العراقي منير بشير، يدافع بشراسة عن مشاركته في مشروع «القدس مدينة السلامين» الذي يصفه بالخطوة الراقية... ذلك أنّ الفنّ «لا علاقة له بالسياسة والحروب»!

وسيم إبراهيم
لا ينكر عمر بشير (1970) أنّ بعض من يشاركهم العزف يحملون الجنسية الإسرائيلية. «ما ذنبهم إن كان قدرهم الولادة في حضن الاحتلال، طالما أنّ «الواحد منهم يقول أنا يهودي عراقي أو يمني، لا يهودي إسرائيلي؟»، يتساءل عازف العود العراقي. تبادره بالقول إنّ كثيرين من يهود إسرائيل من أصول عربية، وبعضهم مجرمو حرب. فيعود ليدافع عن رأيه مذكّراً أنّ الفلسطينيين المشاركين في «القدس مدينة السلامين» يسافرون بجوازات إسرائيلية.
نجل منير بشير، الرائد العراقي في تطوير تقنيات عزف العود، يقدّم في الاحتفالية بعض التقاسيم. هو لا يبدي أيّ أسف على مشاركته مع عازفين إسرائيليين في «القدس مدينة السلامين». يؤكّد أنّه بفعل إقامته الدائمة في بودابست، سيلتحق بالمجموعة نفسها خلال جولاتها القادمة. هل سيفعل ذلك رغم الاعتراضات؟ ترتفع نبرته ويردّ بطوباويّة مقلقة: «أرفض أن يملي عليّ أحد ما ينبغي فعله، ويقال لي: لا تعزف مع فنان أصله يهودي عراقي أو مصري. الفن لا علاقة له بالسياسة والحروب».
نعود لنذكّره أننا نفرّق بين اليهودي والإسرائيلي. لكنَّه يذهب «أعمق» من ذلك، فيقول إنّ علاقته الشخصية بالعازفين الإسرائيليين «أكبر من النقاش حول من هو الإسرائيلي ومن هو العربي». نسأله ألا يخشى اتهامه بالتطبيع الثقافي؟ فيرفض السؤال جملة وتفصيلاً: «لا أعتبر هذا تطبيعاً. أتيت لأقدّم فني وبلدي وآلتي الموسيقية. هذا أفضل من أن يفعل ذلك عازف إسرائيلي، ويدّعي أنّ العود من اختراعه». نحاول أن نتبعه في هذا المنطق الغريب، ولكن سدى.

Egyptian actor Khaled Nabawi accused of 'normalization with Israel'

Egypt's Actors Guild launches inquiry against Khaled Nabawy over his role in American film 'Fair Game' alongside Israeli actress Liraz Charhi


The head of Egypt's Actors Guild, Ashraf Zaki, has decided to launch an inquiry against Egyptian actor Khaled Nabawy for "normalization with Israel" over his role in Doug Liman's American film "Fair Game" alongside Israeli actress Liraz Charhi.

Nabawy was criticized by Egyptian officials after being photographed embracing Charhi on the red carper during the Cannes International Film Festival, where the movie has its world premiere and took part in the official competition.

The different professional associations in Egypt forbid any type of normalization with the Jewish state and strongly condemn any association member who challenges this demand.