Bezalel Smotrich has said financial institutions in the country should “take measured risks” in servicing settlers targeted by Brussels in 2024
Israeli banks should provide services to settlers whom the European Union has slapped with sanctions, despite any potential repercussions, the country’s Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has insisted. He warned that those failing to comply could be made to pay out hefty compensations.
Last July, the EU for the first time in its history imposed punitive measures on five Israeli settlers and three groups over “serious and systematic human rights abuses against Palestinians” in the occupied West Bank, which is considered part of Palestine under international law. Apart from an EU-wide entry ban and an asset freeze, the sanctions prohibit the “provision of funds or economic resources, directly or indirectly,” to the affected Israeli nationals.
In a post on X on Wednesday, the official, who is known for his far-right views, said that he had sent a letter to the banking supervisor, Dani Khachiashvili, in which he demanded an end to “the ‘zero risk’ policy on the part of banks, which leads to the abandonment of Israeli customers under the guise of compliance with foreign sanctions.” Smotrich accused Israeli financial institutions of “small-mindedness” and unquestioning compliance with “unjust” EU sanctions.
He argued that banks in fact “have a significant ability to act against” Brussels’ punitive measures, by taking legal action and wielding their “global economic connections.”
The official threatened that if his call was not heeded, he would push for legislation that would force Israeli financial institutions to pay out sizable compensations to the affected individuals. The Israeli finance minister further wrote that he could also promote legislation that would require the Bank of Israel to “open and manage bank accounts for citizens on whom sanctions are imposed.”
Speaking to AFP last month, Swedish Foreign Minister Maria Malmer Stenergard said that Stockholm would “push for EU sanctions against individual Israeli ministers” since there was no “clear improvement for the civilians in Gaza.”
At around the same time, her Slovenian colleague, Tanja Fajon, announced that her country was “looking into the possibility of sanctions against Israel, alongside France and Ireland.”
Also in May, the UK and Canada, which are not part of the EU, along with France, issued a joint statement condemning the ongoing Israeli military campaign in Gaza.
The document accused the Israeli government of denying “essential humanitarian assistance to the civilian population” of the Palestinian enclave.
London, Ottawa and Paris threatened to “take further concrete actions,” including “targeted sanctions,” should “egregious actions” on the part of Israel continue.
The statement also demanded that Israel halt settlement activities in the occupied West Bank.
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