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KIRYAT SHMONA: Employees return from a coffee break at the offices of the Bezeq telecoms firm in the northern city of Kiryat Shmona near the border with Lebanon.— AFP
KIRYAT SHMONA: Employees return from a coffee break at the offices of the Bezeq telecoms firm in the northern city of Kiryat Shmona near the border with Lebanon.— AFP

Norway wealth fund divests from Bezeq over services to West Bank settlements

Companies active in occupied territories were under review

OSLO/JERUSALEM: Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, the world’s largest, has sold all its shares in Bezeq as it provides telecoms services to Zionist settlements in the occupied West Bank. The decision, announced late on Tuesday, comes after the fund’s ethics watchdog, the Council on Ethics, adopted a new, tougher interpretation of ethics standards for businesses that aid Zionist operations in the occupied Palestinian territories. The $1.8-trillion fund has been an international leader in the environmental, social and governance (ESG) investment field. It owns 1.5 percent of the world’s listed shares across 8,700 companies, and its size gives it influence.

It is the latest decision by a European financial entity to cut back links to Zionist companies or those with ties to the country, as pressure mounts from foreign governments to end the war in Gaza. Bezeq, (Zionist entity’s) largest telecoms group, declined to comment. “The company, through its physical presence and provision of telecom services to settlements in the West Bank, is helping to facilitate the maintenance and expansion of these settlements, which are illegal under international law,” the sovereign wealth fund’s watchdog said in its recommendation to divest. “By doing so the company is itself contributing to the violation of international law.”

The watchdog said it noted that the company had said it was providing telecoms services to Palestinian areas in the West Bank, but that did not outweigh the fact that it was also providing services to settlements. The watchdog makes recommendations to the board of the Norwegian central bank, which has the final say on divestments. The advice on Bezeq was the first recommendation to divest since the watchdog toughened its policy in August. More decisions are expected.

‘Political decision’

The fund has now sold all its stock in the company. Before that, it had cut its stake during the first half of 2024, owning 0.76 percent of the company’s shares valued at $23.7 million at the end of June, down from a holding of 2.2 percent at the start of the year, fund data showed. Sources close to the company said the divestment’s impact was “negligible” as it amounted to 0.7 percent of the shares and that the decision was clearly a “political decision”. They said Bezeq was allowed to provide telecoms services to Jewish settlements in Area C under the 1994 Oslo Accords - which also called for the Palestinian Authority to set up their own telecoms network to Palestinian areas.

“Bezeq is operating according to the Oslo agreements so it’s a political decision,” said one source. “Of all the companies to choose from (to divest), Bezeq should have been the last.” Norway in May recognized Palestine as a state, alongside Spain and Ireland. Norway served as a facilitator in the 1992-1993 talks between Zionists and the Palestinian Liberation Organization that led to the Oslo Accords in 1993. Area C, which comprises about 60 percent of the West Bank, is under full Zionist control and contains most settlements.

‘No special rights’

The Council on Ethics said it was aware of this but that “the situation in the area has developed in the opposite direction to that presumed by the Oslo Accords”. “The settlements are constantly being expanded, Palestinians are constantly being driven from their homes and land areas are de facto being annexed,” it told Reuters, citing its recommendation. “Qualified discrimination and violent abuse of the Palestinian population in Area C is also taking place.”

The fund watchdog’s new definition of ethical breaches is partly based on an International Court of Justice finding in July that “the occupation itself, settlement policy and the way Zionist entity uses the natural resources in the areas are in conflict with international law”, according to a Aug. 30 letter it addressed to the finance ministry.

Since the Gaza war began in October 2023, the council had been investigating whether more companies fall outside its permitted investment guidelines. Before the announcement to divest, the fund had divested from nine companies operating in the West Bank. Their operations include building roads and homes in settlements in East Jerusalem and the West Bank and providing surveillance systems for a wall around the West Bank. — Reuters

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