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PROFITEERING ON OCCUPATION How Israeli and International Businesses and Financial Institutions Sustain Illegal Occupation By Dan Steinbock

PROFITEERING ON OCCUPATION How Israeli and International Businesses and Financial Institutions Sustain Illegal Occupation By Dan Steinbock

As the West Bank is being annexed to Israel through blood and violence, many Israeli and international businesses and financials are tacitly supporting the ethnic cleansing with their business operations in the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.

Recently, The Norwegian parliament rejected efforts to tighten rules on its huge sovereign wealth fund investing in companies operating in the West Bank. Despite Norway’s central role in the initiation of the two-state peace process in the 1990s, the Norwegians lawmakers voted by 88 to 16 against a proposal that would have ordered the fund to withdraw from companies “that contribute to Israel’s war crimes and the illegal occupation” of the West Bank.

Fueled by vast revenue from Norway’s abundant oil and gas exports, Norway’s sovereign wealth fund is the biggest in the world and has some $1.8 trillion invested around the globe. Its precedence-setting example matters, especially as it prides itself over the fact that many companies are excluded from its portfolios “on ethical grounds.”

Why then the vote for continued war crimes, illegal occupation and ethnic cleansing?

Double standards

According to its ethical guidelines, the Fund cannot invest money in companies that directly or indirectly contribute to killing, torture, deprivation of freedom or other violations of human rights in conflict situations or wars. But in practice, the fund is allowed to invest in a number of arms-producing companies, as only some kind of weapons, such as nuclear arms, are banned by the ethical guidelines as investment objects.

In the past two decades, the Fund has excluded some Israeli companies, but in a highly restrictive manner, including Elbit Systems (Sep. 2009), due to supply of surveillance systems for the Israeli West Bank barrier; Africa Israel Investments and Danya Cebus (Aug. 2010), and Shikun Uvinui (Jun. 2012), due to violation of international humanitarian law in occupied Palestinian territory by being involved in developing settlements.

Such exclusions create an impression of token concern because there are dozens and dozens of both Israeli and international companies operating in the West Bank, even as its Palestinian residents are under constant threat of violence and ethnic cleansing.

In Norway, the government was under pressure to use its financial clout to influence Israel’s policies in Gaza and the West Bank, where its settlement policy has long been deemed illegal under international law. Some 50 Norwegian NGOs, spearheaded by the country’s main union, called on the Labor government to ensure that the fund’s investments were in line with the country’s legal obligations.

Meanwhile, UN special rapporteur on the Palestinian territories, Francesca Albanese, urged Oslo to “fully and unconditionally divest from all entities linked to Israel’s unlawful presence in the occupied Palestinian territory.” In his reply of May 30, Norway’s finance minister Jens Stoltenberg said the Norwegian government was deeply concerned by developments in Palestine, both in Gaza and in the West Bank. Then he proceeded to defend the “legality” of the Fund’s controversial investments in the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories. Stoltenberg is the former chief of NATO.

Business operations in the West Bank

Since the late 2010s, the UN Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner (OHCHR) has used independent international fact-finding missions to investigate the implications of the Israeli settlements on the civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights of the Palestinian people throughout the occupied territories, including East Jerusalem. These reports do not cover all companies operating in the occupied territories. However, they do include the major ones that play the most critical roles.(see Table).

Table Israeli and International Companies in the Occupied Territories

Companies in settlements*

European creditors *

European investors *

A. Business enterprises no longer involved in listed activities:

Amnon Mesilot Ltd.

Ashtrom Properties Ltd

Avgol Industries 1953

Bank Otsar Ha-Hayal

Brand Industries Ltd.

Citadis Israel Ltd.

Darban Investments Ltd.

Energy Renewable Energies

General Mills Inc.

General Mills Israel

Indorama Ventures P.C.L.

Jerusalem Economy Ltd.

Municipal Bank Ltd.

Pelegas Ltd.

Zorganika Ltd.

B. Business enterprises involved in listed activities

Airbnb Inc.

American Israeli Gas Corp

Amir Marketing and Investment Inc.

Amos Hadar Properties and Inv.

Angel Bakeries

Archivists Ltd.

Ariel Properties Group

Ashtrom Industries Ltd.

Bank Hapoalim B.M.

Bank Leumi Le-Israel B.M

Bank of Jerusalem Ltd.

Beit Haarchiv Ltd.

Bezeq the Israel Telecom Corp

Booking.com B.V.

C Mer Industries Ltd.

Café Israel Ltd.

Caliber

Cellcom Israel Ltd.

Cherriessa Ltd.

Chish Nofei Israel Ltd.

Comasco Ltd.

D.B.S Satellite Services Ltd

Delek Group Ltd.

Delta Israel Brands Ltd

Dor Alon Energy in Israel 1988 Ltd

Egis Rail

Egged Transportation Ltd.

Electra Afikim

EPR Systems Ltd.

Extal Ltd.

Expedia Group Inc.

Field Produce Ltd.

Field Produce Marketing Ltd.

First International Bank of Israel

Galshan Shvakim Ltd.

Hadiklaim Israel Date Growers

Hot Mobile Ltd.

Hot Telecom Systems

Mivne Real Estate

Israel Discount Bank

Israel Railways Corp

Italek Ltd.

J.C. Bamford Excavators

Kavim Public Transportation

Lipski Installation

Matrix IT Ltd.

Mayer Davidov Garages

Mekorot Water Company

Mercantile Discount Bank

Merkavim Transportation Tech

Mizrahi Tefahot Bank

Modi’in Ezrachi Group

Mordechai Aviv Tassiot

Motorola Solutions Israel

Naaman Group Ltd.

Nof Yam Security

Ofertex Industries 1997

Partner Communication

Paz Oil

Pelephone Communications

Proffimat S.R.

Rami Levy Chain Stores

Rami Levy Hashikma

Re/Max Israel

Shalgal Food Ltd.

Shapir Engineering

Shufersal Ltd.

Sonol Israel Ltd.

Superbus Ltd.

Supergum Industries

Tahal Group International

TripAdvisor Inc

Twitoplast Ltd.

Unikowsky Maoz Ltd.

Zakai Agriculture Know-how

ZF Development

ZMH Hammerman Ltd.

Zriha Hlavin Industries

C. Business enterprises involved as parent companies:

Alon Blue Square

Alstom S.A.10

Altice International Ltd.

Ashtrom Group Ltd.

Booking Holdings Inc.

Delta Galil Industries

ODIGEO S.A.

Egis Group

Electra Group Ltd.

Export Investment Co

Hadar Group

Hamat Group Ltd.

Kardan N.V.

Mayer’s Cars and Trucks

Motorola Solutions Inc.

Natoon Group

Villar International Ltd.

D. Business enterprise involved as licensors or franchisors

Greenkote P.L.C.

Loans and underwriting services to selected

companies, by creditor parent:

BNP Paribas

HSBC

Deutsche Bank

Société Générale

KfW

Barclays

Crédit Agricole

Santander

ING Group

UniCredit

Banco Bilbayo Vizcaya Argetaria

Commerzbank

Groupe BPCE

Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken

NatWest

Standard Chartered

Intesa Sanpaolo

Crédit Mutuel

La Caixa

Danske Bank

Swedbank

Landesbank Baden Württemberg

DZ Bank

Nordea

BayernLB

Rabobank

Landesbank Hessen-Thüringen

Svenska Handelsbanken

KBC Group

DNB

Lloyds Banking

Raiffeisen Banking

Norddeutsche Landesbank

Hamburg Commercial Bank

Erste Group

Paragon Bank

La Banque Postale

BNP Finance

Banco de Sabadell

Share and bondholding in selected companies,

by investor parent:

Government Pension Fund Global

Crédit Agricole

Deutsche Bank

Groupe BPCE

Legal & General

Allianz

Deka Group

Nordea

AB Industrivärden

BNP Paribas

DZ Bank

Schroders

Swedbank

“Algemeen Burgerlijk

Pensioenfonds”

HSBC

Janus Henderson

Intesa Sanpaolo

Barclays

AMF Pensionsförsäkring

Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken

Svenska Handelsbanken

AXA

Alecta

Abrdn

“Pensioenfonds Zorg

en Welzijn”

Sjunde AP-fonden

M&G

Baillie Gifford

La Banque Postale

Storebrand

Aviva

Flossbach & von Storch

“Pensioenfonds Metaal en

Techniek”

Bpifrance

Första AP-Fonden

B-Flexion

Ackermans & Van Haaren

Independent Franchise Partners

Crédit Mutuel

Man Group

Royal London

Rothschild

“Pensioenfonds van de

Metalektro”

Fjärde AP-Fonden

Banco Mediolanum

AKO Capital

Aegon

Tredje AP- Fonden

KBC

Anima

 

The overwhelming majority of these firms are headquartered in Israel. There are more than 110 such companies. Since the first OHCHR report in 2020, some are no longer involved in the listed activities, such as General Mills and its Israeli subsidiary, which likely divested following a campaign to get the company to stop manufacturing its Pillsbury products on stolen Palestinian land. In addition to a broad variety of Israeli companies making money on the illicit territories, several international companies prevail in these areas, including Airbnb and Expedia (U.S.), Booking.com and Tahal Group (Netherlands), J.C. Bamford Excavators and Opodo (UK).

Still others operate through their parent organizations, including Motorola and Booking Holdings (U.S.), Egis (France), and Altice (Luxembourg), and licensors or franchisors, such as Greenkote (UK).

European financial institutions behind settler expansion

According to Don’t Buy into Occupation (DBIO), a coalition of 25 Palestinian, regional and European organizations, in the early 2020s almost 800 European financial institutions, including banks, asset managers, insurance companies, and pension funds, had financial relationships with more than 50 businesses that were actively involved with Israeli settlements.

All of these companies were involved in activities that raise particular human rights concerns, which constitute the basis for inclusion in the UN database of business enterprises.

The list had almost 40 major European creditors, including BNP Paribas, HSCBC and Barclays, and 50 European investors, including Crédit Agricole, Deutsche Bank and Allianz.

In addition to Israeli companies, defense contractors, financial institutions and universities that have been targeted in boycott and sanction campaigns for years, recent boycott efforts have increasingly centered on companies that play a critical role in the occupied territories, especially in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

Under international law, Israeli settlements, their maintenance and expansion are illegal activities, which give rise to individual criminal liability as war crimes and crimes against humanity under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. Israeli, European, and international business enterprises, operating with or providing services to Israeli settlements, play a critical role in the functioning, sustainability and expansion of illegal settlements.

Israelis for boycotts

In the past decade, the Israeli government has invested hundreds of millions of dollars in PR struggles against the international boycott movement. Though controversial, the latter has attracted some Israeli Jews. Despite different political motivations, they are united by the quest for peace and the view that international pressure is necessary to achieve change in Israel.

Burg’s views were echoed by Ha’aretz journalist Gideon Levy, who also supported boycotting Israel, stressing that it was “the Israeli patriot’s final refuge.” As far he was concerned, “the change won’t come from within.”

International boycotts are painful, but they cost less than human massacres and economic expenditures associated with forever wars. They are neither antisemitic nor anti-Israel. They target the occupation, the settlers and their allies in Israel and elsewhere, and their violence.

Yet, the likelihood that most Israelis would adopt Gideon Levy’s view of Israeli boycotts is currently minimal, thanks to the parallel universe created by decades of massive U.S. military aid and money flows by American Jewry to Israel.

If the status quo is untenable and change won’t come from within, then change can only come from without.

The author of The Fall of Israel (2025), Dr Dan Steinbock is the founder of Difference Group and has served at the India, China and America Institute (US), Shanghai Institute for International Studies (China) and the EU Center (Singapore). For more, see https://www.differencegroup.net/

The original version was released by Informed Comment on June 11, 2025

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Bhumish Sheth

Bhumish Sheth is a writer for Qrius.com. He brings clarity and insight to topics in Technology, Culture, Science & Automobiles. His articles make complex ideas easy to understand. He focuses on practical insights readers can use in their daily lives.

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