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<i>Published on Monday, April 22, 2002 by <font color="#0000FF"><u>Inter
Press Service</u></font> <br>
<br>
</i><b>Mideast Street Anger Turns into Calls for Boycott of U.S. Goods by
N Janardhan</b> <br>
<br>
DUBAI, Apr 22 - The university cafeteria at the University of Sharjah has
stopped selling softdrinks manufactured by U.S. multinationals, and
instead stocks other beverages produced in the country or region.<br>
The American economy is "surviving on Arab money, which is used to
supply the Israelis with monetary and military assistance to kill the
Palestinians who are resisting the occupation for 50 years,'' Nawal
Jasim, head of the Women Students' Union at the university, said in
explaining the boycott. <br>
"If the Arab governments do not boycott American goods, we believe
it is our responsibility to take the initiative,'' Jasim added in an
interview. ''We are a billion Muslims and imagine how much the U.S.
economy would be affected if each of us boycott a softdrink can or all
American products.'' <br>
These moves for a boycott, amid the Israeli offensive against Palestinian
areas for weeks now, are triggering a people's revolution of a kind
rarely seen before in the region.<br>
They reflect how the angry political calls in the Arab street for
Israel's withdrawal are fast turning into a search for an economic threat
against Washington, in order to force a policy shift by the United
States. <br>
Unlike the rhetoric of Arab governments, people in the region are
resorting to taking action at their level by boycotting U.S.-made
products - thus, UAE journalists are organizing a boycott conference,
some Lebanese have begun turning their backs away from American products
like cigarettes. <br>
Some have gone as far as calling for a repudiation of the U.S. dollar in
international trade. <br>
"I have never seen the streets in the Gulf filled with so much
hatred and anger as they have been in the past fortnight. The situation
is reaching boiling point,'' said Dr Saeed Hareb, professor of law at the
UAE University. <br>
"The striking feature of the demonstrations is that the initiatives
have been taken not by the governments, but by students as a collective
group and by individuals out of their own choice," he said in an
interview. <br>
Last week, the UAE Journalists' Association announced that a national
committee for boycotting American goods would be formed in cooperation
with public welfare societies and civil society organizations. <br>
In a statement, Dr Aisha al-Nuaimi, a member of the association, urged
the government to support the first boycott conference on May 13-14.
<br>
Anas Al Zaibaq, a Syrian marketing representative working for a private
company in the UAE, said: "Since the United States has been
supporting Israel in its crime, we as Arabs must put pressure on it by
boycotting its products." <br>
A war on the economic front is one language the materialistic West
understands, he argues. <br>
"Many people, including me, have boycotted American products and
this has driven most American franchisers in the Arab world to think of
alternatives to boost sales, implying that losses are being
suffered," Zaibaq said in an interview. <br>
The first of the demands for the boycott of American products in the
region came surprisingly from Bahrain, a major non-North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO) ally of the United States and where its navy's Fifth
Fleet is now positioned. <br>
Anti-Israel and anti-U.S. graffiti reportedly began appearing there about
two weeks ago. <br>
So far, the rallying calls have not just been for boycotting American
goods, but: "we want the government to close the U.S. embassy and
the military bases," according to Manama's 'Akhbar Al Khaleej'
newspaper. <br>
A group of people even managed to break through a U.S. Embassy compound
wall, damaging windowpanes and setting at least three cars on fire,
leading the King Hamad Bin Issa Al Khalifa to warn Washington that the
U.S. interests in the region were in jeopardy if it did not alter its
Middle East stance. <br>
Apart from the Gulf, Lebanon, Morocco and Iraq have also witnessed
"boycott" calls. <br>
American cigarettes became the first casualty of such calls in Lebanon.
"The price of a packet of American cigarettes is equal to the price
of a bullet that will be targeted at the Palestinian people," said a
leaflet distributed by university students in Beirut recently, according
to the local 'Gulf News' newspaper. <br>
Lists of Lebanese, Arab, European and Asian products have been
distributed to houses as alternatives, resulting in the "sale of
American cigarettes going down by half'', it added. <br>
Addressing a rally of 2,000 Iraqi students protesting Israel's military
offensive in the West Bank, ruling Baath Party official Huda Saleh Mehdi
Ammash urged Arabs to convert their demonstrations into action. <br>
"Boycott American companies that support the Zionist entity (Israel)
and take other initiatives that convert emotions to an effective Arab
action in defense of our just cause of Palestine," she was quoted as
saying in the UAE's 'The Gulf Today' newspaper on Sunday. <br>
The same day, 'Akhbar Al Arab' newspaper proposed in an editorial that
the Gulf countries stop pegging their currencies to the U.S. Dollar
<br>
"What is required is to delink from the dollar ... and stop
supporting this currency so that it no longer dominates international
markets while it is effectively a weapon directed against the Arabs,
their rights and their interests,'' it said. <br>
Last week, the Moroccan newspaper 'L'Economiste' suggested that the
dollar be ditched in trade dealings and the euro be used instead,
following the lead of Iraq, which last year switched its foreign
commercial dealings to the euro. <br>
But Dr Ali Ahmed Al Ghafli of the American University of Sharjah advises
caution amid the height of emotion and anger. <br>
He recommends that economy and politics function independently and that
one should not be used to influence the other, lest it hurt the Gulf and
Middle itself. <br>
"Arabs have not yet exhausted all the political options to solve
this political problem which can take them out of the frying pan
(implying the severance of Jordan's and Egypt's ties with Israel which
would put the U.S. under pressure),'' he said in an interview. <br>
''Opting for the economic weapon may prove counterproductive given the
region's reliance on Western products. There is no logic in jumping from
the frying pan into the fire," he explained. <br>
But for some, calling for boycotts makes them feel less helpless than
standing by as the Israeli offensive continues. <br>
At a rally last week, for instance, Nawal Jasim of the University of
Sharjah was busy calling on cooperative societies and foodstuff dealers
in the country to instantly provide alternatives to American products to
help a national boycott effort. <br>
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Copyright 2002 IPS<br>
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