Wellness Warehouse must remove Israeli Ahava products now or face protest

On the 16th of August 2010, Open Shuhada Street sent the following letter to Wellness Warehouse; a retailer of wellness products and services which stocks Ahava products.

AHAVA PRODUCTS ARE PRODUCED IN VIOLATION OF INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW: WE RESPECTFULLY REQUEST THAT YOU DESIST FROM IMPORTING AND SELLING AHAVA PRODUCTS

“We have unquestionable respect for human rights and dignity. We strongly believe in empowering
people. All are treated with empathy.”

– Wellness Warehouse Corporate Values

Sean Gomes, CEO
Wellness Warehouse
Headoffice
50 Kloof Street
PO Box 3644
Cape Town
8000

By fax and email: 021 487 5455 and sean[at]wellnesswarehouse.com

16 August 2010

Dear Sean Gomes,

AHAVA PRODUCTS ARE PRODUCED IN VIOLATION OF INTERNATIONAL HUMAN
RIGHTS LAW: WE RESPECTFULLY REQUEST THAT YOU DESIST FROM IMPORTING
AND SELLING AHAVA PRODUCTS

We write on behalf of Open Shuhada Street. We are an organization dedicated to giving solidarity to
Palestinian and Israeli activists working together to peacefully end the Occupation and human rights
abuses. Open Shuhada Street stands for non-violence, the mutual respect of human rights, and equality
of life for all people living in Israel and Palestine.

According to your mission statement, Wellness Warehouse promotes consumption that “cares for the
earth and its people”. This commendable policy provides people in South Africa with an ethical choice
when buying your products. There can be little doubt therefore that you aim to source products in a
manner that is consistent with international human rights values and law.

In this spirit, we request that you do not stock products from the Occupied Palestinian Territories
(OPT) and in particular, products made by Ahava Dead Sea Laboratories.

CONQUEST AND OCCUPATION IN PALESTINE AND ISRAEL

For decades, the Israeli government has repeatedly violated human rights of the Palestinian people. The
War of 1948 scattered refugees across the Middle East, while those remaining within the state of Israel
have been treated as second-class citizens. In the Occupied West Bank, the official policy of separation
and legal discrimination is tragically reminiscent of our own history in South Africa.

In a recent report on West Bank settlements, the respected Israeli human rights organisation B”tselem
found that:

“¢ More than 300,000 Israeli settlers live in 121 settlements and about 100 outposts.
“¢ Almost 200,000 live in twelve neighbourhoods that Israel established on land it annexed to the
Jerusalem Municipality.
“¢ Altogether these 500,000 Israeli settlers have effectively usurped 42 percent of the land area of the
West Bank.

B”tselem concludes that the Israeli “settlement enterprise has been characterized, since its inception, by
an instrumental, cynical, and even criminal approach to international law, local legislation, Israeli
military orders, and Israeli law.”

Furthermore, Israel has a dismal track record regarding the treatment of civilian populations in theatres
of war. The UN Commission on the Gaza War headed by former South African Constitutional Court
judge, Richard Goldstone, found that Israel had a case to answer for war crimes and crimes against
humanity committed during Operation Cast Lead in Dec. 2008 – Jan. 2009 in which 13 Israelis and
1417 Palestinians were killed. Israel”s disregard of international law should no longer be tolerated.
It must also be noted that actions by the Palestinian resistance require condemnation, particularly
suicide bombings and rocket attacks on Israeli civilians – which the Goldstone Commission also
described as war crimes.

All people have the right to life and the right to defend themselves – within the limits of the law.
Nonetheless, Israeli claims of self-defense cannot justify the ongoing oppression of Palestinians.
In response to their intolerable circumstances, Palestinian civil society has called for economic,
military and other international sanctions against Israel. Similarly, the Palestinian Authority has called
for the boycott of all products manufactured by the unlawful settlements in the OPT.

WHY AHAVA?

Ahava products are manufactured by Dead Sea Laboratories, a privately held Israeli cosmetics
company using minerals and mud from the Dead Sea. Their main factory is located in the Israeli
settlement of Mitzpe Shalem in the Occupied West Bank. Ahava products are labeled as of “Israeli
origin,” but according to international law, including UN Security Council resolutions, the West Bank
cannot be considered to be part of the State of Israel. Not only does Ahava profit from the occupation
by locating its main plant and store in an illegal Israeli settlement, it also extensively uses mud from
the Dead Sea in its products, excavated in an occupied area, and thus it exploits natural resources from
the OPT, for profit. This is theft.

International law, including the Fourth Geneva Convention, forbids an occupying power from utilizing
the natural resources of the occupied territory for its own benefit. In February 2010, the European
Court of Justice (ECJ) ruled that products from the OPT cannot carry the label “Israeli origin”. The ECJ
held that products obtained from the OPT did not qualify for preferential treatment under European
Union and Israeli trade agreements.

The Wellness Warehouse website states that you “promote fair and ethical interactions and business
dealings” and “accept accountability in all … areas of responsibility.” By stocking Ahava products,
Wellness Warehouse is unwittingly violating its own code.

We urge you to stop stocking all settlement products, in particular Ahava. By doing so you will help to
make the occupation unprofitable, and hasten its end. This is necessary for peace in Israel and
Palestine.

Open Shuhada Street looks forward to receiving your reply by no later than close of business on
23rd August 2010. We support non-violent protest and the international boycott of Ahava
Products. Should you fail to respond positively to our request Open Shuhada Street will
regrettably organise protests at your stores in South Africa.

Yours faithfully,
The Open Shuhada Street steering committee:
Zackie Achmat, Nathan Geffen, Doron Isaacs, Daniel Mackintosh, Nabeelah Martin, Ilan Strauss

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