Norwegian union boycotts Israel angering Tel Aviv

Norway’s biggest trade union voted in favour of a boycott against Israel, a decision immediately condemned by Israeli diplomats who judged it “immoral.”
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Israel’s Embassy in Oslo said it “condemns in the strongest terms” the boycott [AFP]
Norway’s biggest trade union voted in favour of a boycott against Israel on Friday, a decision immediately condemned by Israeli diplomats who judged it “immoral.”

The Norwegian Confederation of Trade Unions [LO] went against a recommendation from its leadership and voted 197 to 117 in favour of an international economic, cultural and academic boycott against Israel because of the current impasse over the Palestine issue.

LO, which also called for Norway to recognise a Palestinian state according to the 1967 borders, was criticised by the government.

“Norwegian government strongly opposes Norway's Labour Union’s decision – the boycott of Israel. We need more cooperation and dialogue, not boycott,” Foreign Minister Borge Brende wrote on Twitter.
Israel’s Embassy in Oslo said it condemns the boycott "in the strongest terms."

“This immoral resolution reflects deeply rooted attitudes of bias, discrimination and double standard toward the Jewish state,” ambassador Raphael Schutz wrote in an e-mail to AFP.
 
Noting that LO had also called for the dismantling of a wall erected by Israel separating it from the Palestinian territories, Schutz said that “by adopting these positions LO placed itself shoulder to shoulder with the worst enemies of Israel.”

Norway hosted Israeli-Palestinian peace talks in the early 1990s that led to the now-defunct Oslo accords.