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UK expected to pass anti-BDS law regarding pension system

A spokesperson for the U.K. Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, said “we are committed to ensuring public bodies take a consistent approach to investments and stop local boycotts.”

British Parliament in London. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
British Parliament in London. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

The United Kingdom is expected to pass a law prohibiting local governments from boycotting countries, including Israel, in their pension system.

The upcoming move follows the country’s Supreme Court overturning a government guidance last week to local councils forbidding action to boycott Israel, stating that doing so is “contrary to UK foreign or defense policy.”

“We are committed to ensuring public bodies take a consistent approach to investments and to stop local boycotts. We will therefore bring back new legislation that addresses the technical points raised by the Supreme Court,” said a spokesperson for the U.K. Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, reported The Jerusalem Post on Monday.

The overturned guidance involved 89 pension funds in England and Wales, affecting 5 million former and current local council employees.

A 3-2 majority of the Supreme Court’s judges deemed that the anti-BDS guidance was unlawful. Justice Robert Carnwath said guidance about pension funds are “judgments to be made by the administering authority, not by the secretary of state.”

Palestine Solidarity Campaign chairman Kamel Hawwash hailed the Supreme Court ruling as “a major win, not just for the campaign for Palestinian rights, but for the fundamental principles of democracy, freedom of expression and justice.”

“The Supreme Court’s technical ruling on local authority divestments serves to reinforce the importance of the government’s forthcoming legislation,” said the leadership of Conservative Friends of Israel. “We reiterate our strong support for the Conservative Government’s manifesto commitment to ban public bodies from imposing their own boycotts, divestments and sanctions, which have all too often sown discord within local communities.”

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