Mideast conflict hits SA shop shelves
By Megan Power
The Mercury
July 26, 2006

Leading chocolate, softdrink, cellphone and toiletry companies in South Africa have been threatened with a consumer boycott as part of a local campaign against Israel's intensified military assault on Palestine.

And Pick 'n Pay and Spar have been singled out as targets if they ignore a call from Palestinian activists to remove Israeli-imported products from their shelves.

The threats, made by the Palestine Solidarity Group, accompany a list of products from companies it claims either invest in, or support, Israel. The group has also called on the South African government to impose sanctions against Israel, and to ban Israeli goods from coming into the country.

Products the group has identified for boycott include Coca-Cola, Fanta, Nestle's Kit-Kat and Nesquik, Huggies nappies, Kleenex tissues and Nokia products.

The group's blacklist is based on claims that:

"We want consumers to be aware that by buying certain products, they're contributing to the bullets and military armament used against Palestinians," said Palestine Solidarity Group convener, Mercia Andrews, also an executive member of the South African Non-Governmental Organization Coalition.

Pick 'n Pay, however, says it will not remove Israeli products.

Said its chairman, Raymond Ackerman: "I don't believe in boycotts and threats, and I'm against people who create ugliness in a country where we need peace at all costs. I call on all people in our country to respect that we are South Africans, and not to create divisions between Muslim and Jewish people at this critical time."

Spar could not be reached for comment.