Members of major UK supermarket chain vote to boycott Israeli goods

Members of one of the UK’s biggest supermarket chains have voted to end all trading with Israel at its annual general meeting. (X/@trishaposner)
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Updated 17 May 2025
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Members of major UK supermarket chain vote to boycott Israeli goods

  • Motion calls for Co-op Group to take ‘all Israeli products off the shelves’
  • Palestine Solidarity Campaign: Any trade with Israeli agricultural firms risks supporting oppression

LONDON: Members of one of the UK’s biggest supermarket chains have voted to end all trading with Israel at its annual general meeting.

The motion was put to members of the Co-op Group in light of Israel’s ongoing war in Gaza, and its blockade of the Palestinian enclave preventing vital humanitarian aid reaching civilians.

In the motion, members called on the Co-op’s management to “show moral courage and leadership” by taking “all Israeli products off the shelves.”

Paul Neill, an activist who helped put the motion to a vote, said: “We are delighted to say that the motion was passed by a clear majority of Co-op members, reflecting widespread condemnation among the British public for the actions of Israel.

“This is a historic moment for a UK supermarket chain and puts down a marker for other supermarkets and retailers.”

In a press release, the Palestine Solidarity Campaign — which has been running a “Don’t Buy Apartheid” campaign for shops and restaurants to avoid Israeli goods and those of companies linked to the country — cited Israel’s “genocide in Gaza and decades of oppression of Palestinian people by military occupation and apartheid” as key drivers of the vote to sever ties, and called on the Co-op to implement the motion and cease selling Israeli products in its stores.

Lewis Backon, campaigns officer for the PSC, said: “Meaningful solidarity actions could not be more urgent as Palestinians continue to face Israel’s genocide in the Gaza Strip, and its military attacks, land grabs and ethnic cleansing in the West Bank.

“The Co-op AGM vote shows ordinary people in this country are committed to the cause of justice and freedom for Palestine in their everyday lives and refuse to support Israel’s apartheid economy.

“The Co-op must now listen to its members, and implement the motion by taking all Israeli goods off the shelves.”

The PSC said many Israeli goods “such as avocados, peppers, herbs and dates” are common in UK supermarkets.

“Millions in Britain have taken to the streets to oppose Israel’s genocide and the UK government’s complicity in it through military, diplomatic and financial support,” it added.

Israeli agricultural companies — including Hadiklaim, Mehadrin and Edom — “operate farms and packing houses in illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank,” the PSC said.

It added that the Co-op had previously pledged to stop stocking goods from illegal settlements, but that any business done with Israeli agricultural exporters “supports their role as participants in Israel’s colonisation and military occupation of Palestinian land.

“Moreover, campaigners point out that these companies benefit from Israel’s systematic destruction of Palestinian agriculture through exploiting the Palestinian captive market, and contribute tax revenue to the Israeli state, which in turn helps it fund its genocide and apartheid against Palestinians.”

According to an International Court of Justice decision last July, the “appropriation of Palestinian resources like water is a war crime,” the PSC said.

“All states have an obligation not to render aid or assistance to Israel in these violations of international law.”


‘I wanted to die’: survivors recount Mozambique flood terror

Updated 5 sec ago
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‘I wanted to die’: survivors recount Mozambique flood terror

  • The southern African country’s latest bout of flooding has claimed nearly 140 lives since October 1
  • Around 100,000 people are sheltering in one of 99 temporary accommodation centers
MANHICA, Mozambique: Erica Raimundo Mimbir delivered her first baby on a school desk, the only dry place she found after days marooned in her flooded home in southern Mozambique.
“I wanted to die because of the labor pains and the conditions,” the 17-year-old said in a village in the province of Maputo.
Evacuated by boat the next day, Mimbir took shelter with relatives, among some 650,000 Mozambicans the United Nations says have been affected by torrential rains since December.
“I don’t think I’ll return home because I’ve never experienced anything like this,” Mimbir said, recounting that the high waters meant she could not sleep lying down but leaning against a wall.
“It was very painful,” she said, holding her baby, Rosita, who was born on January 19 premature and weighing 1.5 kilograms.
The child was named after Rosita Salvador, whose mother gave birth in a tree that she climbed to escape devastating flooding in Mozambique in 2000.
Salvador, who died this month after a long illness, became a symbol of resilience in a disaster that killed 800 people.
The southern African country’s latest bout of flooding has claimed nearly 140 lives since October 1, according to the National Disasters Management Institute.
Around 100,000 people are sheltering in one of 99 temporary accommodation centers, says the UN’s humanitarian coordination office (OCHA).
‘Heart not at peace’
In the province’s 3 de Fevereiro village in Manhica district, a low-slung school has been turned into one such emergency shelter.
About 500 people sleep on mats in its 11 classrooms, their clothes draped over blackboards and window bars as they take stock of what the floods swept away and how close many came to losing their lives.
Among them is Elsa Paulino, a 36-year-old mother of five who became cut off from her home after taking her two youngest children to a funeral outside her village.
By the time she returned, the road had vanished under rising water. “The car I was traveling in almost overturned because of the fury of the waters,” she said.
Her other three children were still at home. “I was desperate.”
Paulino eventually managed to arrange for them to be evacuated by bus to relatives in neighboring Gaza province, also badly affected by the floods.
But washed-out roads mean her children have still not been able to join her. “Right now I know my children are safe but my mother’s heart isn’t at peace,” she said.
Across the region, floods have ripped through critical infrastructure — roads, bridges, power lines and water systems. They have slowed aid deliveries and isolated entire communities.
The N1 highway linking Maputo to the north remains cut. About 325,000 head of livestock have died and 285,000 hectares (704,250 acres) of farmland have been damaged, according to OCHA.
The latest flooding is among the worst Mozambique has seen in years, with officials warning the death toll could rise as more heavy rains loom and a nationwide red alert remains in force.
For Salvador Maengane, a 67-year-old farmer sheltering in 3 de Fevereiro, the losses are total.
“All my farmland was flooded,” he said. He was due to harvest maize and vegetables in March and sugarcane in May.
“Everything was lost and I have nothing to sell. All my family’s livelihood is gone,” he said, his thin frame hunched with exhaustion.
Maengane, who farms five hectares in Xinavane, further north, said that in previous rainy seasons he could still salvage part of his crop.
“This is the first time I have seen a tragedy of this magnitude,” he said.