Capping a series of victories by a modest band of pro-Palestinian activists, an Israel-based shipping company has re-routed a container ship from the Port of Oakland, where protestors had vowed to keep the ship from unloading, to an alternate destination in Russia.
The company,Ā Zim Integrated Shipping ServicesĀ isĀ one of the largest cargo shipping outfits in the world, but of late it has seen its operations seriously disrupted by a small group of activists motivated by the global Boycott, Divest and Sanctions movement (BDS), which targets companies implicated in Israelās occupation of the Palestinian Territories. Zim is an Israel-based company, and the āBlock the Boatā movement ā a combined effort of labor activists and Palestinian solidarity groups ā has successfully stopped itsĀ ships from docking at Oakland ports several times since this summer.
Zim has drawn particular ire for its role in shipping Israeli armaments. In the words of Block the Boat organizer Lara Kiswani in an interview about the movementĀ earlier this year: āā¦Zim also transports weaponry: Israeli-made weaponry and Israeli-made military vehicles into the United Statesā, adding that, āsome of the more consumer-based products are not Israeli, but the weaponry and the military products are Israeli.ā
Activists associated with the movement at least temporarily prevented Zim ships from unloading inĀ August, when a ship was blocked from unloading and headed toward Los Angeles before turning back andĀ successfully unloading, and again inĀ September. But what appearsĀ to be their greatest victory cameĀ this week, when Zim decided reroute its cargo Russia rather than attempt to dock in Oakland once more. Their decision came just nine days after the companyĀ vowed to dock, in defiance of protests.
The protests appear to be aided by sympathetic longshoremen. Some of Oaklandās unionized dockworkers have expressed sympathy for the demonstratorsā position in the local press, and have at times declined to unload Zim ships during protests, citing safety concerns.
The company claimsĀ that their last-minute decision to reroute wasunrelated to the protests. But its foes arenāt buying it. āWhen a countryās shipping concern canāt come to the port because of the popular resistance it will face there, you can feel that the tables are turning,ā said Jamie Omar Yasin, a Block the Boat activist.
The successful protest action against Zim is part of a global movement for an economic boycott of Israel. Modeled after similar efforts conducted in the past against apartheid South Africa, the BDS movement seeks to put pressure on the Israeli government to end its occupation of Palestinian lands. āThey can look forward to more and more resistance wherever they try and operate,ā Yasin says.
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