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Carmel Agrexco Blockaded

womminorganise | 12.02.2009 07:33 | Campaign against Carmel-Agrexco | Anti-militarism | Gender | Palestine

“We don’t want your bloody valentine”
Feminists blockade Israeli state export company

Two days before Valentines day a group of 15 women have locked themselves to the gates of Israeli export company Carmel Agrexco to stop the delivery of Valentines roses. They were met with heavy force from security and police but are currently holding strong.

The flowers are grown in illegal settlements on Palestinian land and therefore constitute illegally traded goods. The women say that they will blockade Carmel Agrexco until they are cut from the gates and arrested.

Press Release:

“We don’t want your bloody valentine”
Feminists blockade Israeli state export company

Contact Charlotte Murray for interviews and pictures
Tel 0793 022 3825
 womminorganise@gmail.com

12 February 2009
Two days before Valentines day a group of 15 women have locked themselves to the gates of Israeli export company Carmel Agrexco to stop the delivery of Valentines roses. The flowers are grown in illegal settlements on Palestinian land and therefore constitute illegally traded goods. The women say that they will blockade Carmel Agrexco until they are cut from the gates and arrested.

Emma Goldman, a member of the London Anarchafeminist Kollective, said
"Actions like this are a chance for us to show solidarity with the Palestinians who are suffering war crimes at the hands of the Israelis. This Valentines day, women in Palestine will be struggling to piece their society together against the brute force of the occupation. The world did nothing as over 900 people were killed in Gaza last month. Carmel Agrexco, a state owned company, is at the heart of Israel's colonisation and exploitation of Palestinian land"

Carmel Agrexco is the largest importer of illegal settlement goods into
the UK. The Valentines day period is one of their busiest as the company
deals with large amounts of fresh flowers from Israel and the settlements.

In the UK Agrexco is known under the Carmel, Coral and Jaffa brands. The
UK is the most important foreign market for Israeli fresh produce. Agrexco
exports a wide range of produce to the UK including peppers, tomatoes,
strawberries, herbs, spices, flowers and avocados.

Agrexco is the largest exporter of settlement produce for sale overseas.
Much of this produce comes from colonies in the Jordan Valley. Carmel
Agrexco have had dealings with the colonies of Tomer, Mehola, Hamra, Ro’i,
Massua, Patzael, Mekhora, Netiv Ha-Gdud and Bet Ha-Arava.

Previously there have been six blockades of this company stopping work
at the factory. The company persistently refuses to press charges against
the activists because they are scared of having to prove the legality of
their business in open court.

This follows from actions of 11th November 2004, when Palestine-Solidarity
protesters from London and Brighton were arrested after taking part in
non-violent blockades outside the same company and 30 August 2006, when
demonstrators blockaded the company for 11 hours and no arrests were made.

In September 2005, a Judge ruled that Agrexco (UK) must prove that their
business is lawful. The acquittal of the seven activists before they were
able to present their defence meant that the court did not have to rule on
the legality of Agrexco-Carmel’s involvement in the supply of produce from
illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.

In September 2006 protesters blockaded the company again, Carmel refused
to have demonstrators arrested because this would have lead to another
embarrassing court appearance where their business methods would have been investigated by a British court of law. Since then the depot in Middlesex
has been the subject of sustained campaigning. This is the third
Valentine's Day pickett of the premises.

The picket aims to expose this company’s complicity in murder, theft and
damage of occupied land, collective punishment, apartheid, ethnic
cleansing, and other breaches of International Law to public scrutiny.

womminorganise
- e-mail: womminorganise@gmail.com

Comments

Hide the following 7 comments

3 arrested

12.02.2009 08:42

Three of the activists have been violently arrested.

womminorganise


follow-up

12.02.2009 09:34

surely the fact that the charges against these actions have always been dropped means that in effect, there is no offence being committed (i.e. it is only a civil offence such a s trespass). In which case, based on previous experience, if they arrest people, it should be pursued as wrongful arrest (the resulting pay-out can be sent to Gaza) If the police are convinced that a charge IS being committed (e.g. aggravated trespass), then THEY should insist on the charges being pursued, and Carmel would be forced to have their day in court, and possibly even get shut down. This needs to be pushed, I think.

no-one


That's the most likley explanation

12.02.2009 11:01

Not just that it's a civil offense but that they believe that those of you doing this lack property. There's not much point proceding against you for civil damages if you are "judgement proof" because no matter how much the court decided you owed, nothing to pay with.

Can't get blood out of a turnip.

About their being afraid of having to prove their business legal -- you have a rather peculiar conception about where the burden of proo would lie. I'm not intending to maske a statement either way about whether they are legal in Britain or not. Just that they don't have to prove they are legal; you have to prove that they are illegal. A very big difference in any legal proceeding (and why our legal tradition on libel is so very different from yours).

MDN


Aggravated Trespass is a criminal offence

12.02.2009 16:53

Not civil. It's Section 68 of the Criminal Justice & Public Order Act 1994.

streetlawyer


All released from custody

13.02.2009 00:31

Another update (12:30 am). All 3 arrested have now been released, 2 bailed to return in a month.

One of the women was locked in a van at the police station whilst the arresting officers searched the station for the van keys. After a long search and a lot of frantic talk on the police radio a police officer smashed a window of the van to get her out!

At the moment people are arrested for: criminal damage, obstruct pc, sec 5, and assault PC.

They were originally arrested for aggrevated trespass and criminal damage, but after 7 hours in custody the police informed them that Carmel Agrexco had made clear to the police that they do not want any charges pressed and that they were unwilling to provide the police with the CCTV evidence from the warehouse. Yet again they are colluding with the police to avoid an embarassing court case.

womminorganise
mail e-mail: womminorganise@gmail.com


Thinking out loud...

13.02.2009 15:07

Just wondering, and I know this is horrific regurgitation of tactics, but what if some kind of rota-based continuous blockade were put in place? It takes maybe 20 people each day, ergo about 140 people per week, and there are Palestine Groups of one kind or another all over the country. OK, maybe start with a month of blockades, but really put the pressure on until they start charging people. Eventually they charged some of the Faslane lot. We could do the same.

General G


Moral standards

16.02.2009 17:48

You want to think that everybody fallows your moral standards but not in this case. as long as radicalization of islam is present among palestinian population there is no chance for a dialog. as long as radical islam exist among any other community there is no chance for a peaceful coexistence. when the right time come your so called friends stab you in the back saying Allah Akbar..

check it up

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-8fa9yKQeTY

Mac
mail e-mail: lebaski@hotmail.com