|  Serious 
              anti-Israel boycottgains global momentum
 
 By Tim KennedyArab News
 May 
              16, 2002
 
 
 Estee Lauder, Johnson & Johnson, McDonalds, Philip Morris, 
              Perrier, Pizza Hut, Disney, Nestle, Coca-Cola, KFC, Kleenex, Tommy 
              Hilfiger, Clinique. On any given day, from New York to Nairobi, 
              from Jeddah to Johannesburg, from Topeka to Timbuktu, these US-based 
              multinationals sell billions of dollars worth of products. But a growing number of international buyers are shunning goods 
              from these American companies in protest of Washingtons perceived 
              pro-Israel policies. In Arab countries, many activist civic organizations, student groups 
              and professional associations are urging people to shun American 
              goods in favor of local and European alternatives. Boycott organizers have drawn up lists of companies, mainly American, 
              that are thought to channel aid to Israel. Among them are companies 
              making products from cigarettes and medications to fast food and 
              laundry detergents. There are even Internet Web pages  http://www.inminds.co.uk/boycott-israel.html 
              and http://www.boikottisrael.no  dedicated to this cause. So far, fast-food chains appear to be feeling the pressure the 
              most. Managers at KFC and McDonalds branches in the Omani capital 
              of Muscat say sales had fallen by 45 percent and 65 percent, respectively, 
              since January.  A senior executive at Kuwait-based Americana, which has exclusive 
              rights to operate several US franchises  including Pizza Hut 
              and Baskin-Robbins  across the Middle East, says that during 
              the past few months profits and sales fell by 45 percent in 
              Jordan, 40 percent in Egypt and 20 percent across the Persian Gulf 
              region. In Jeddah, Coca-Cola is the worst hit of the US brands, down 60 
              percent, says Ibrahim Mahrous, sales manager at the Bin Dawood supermarket, 
              in an interview with an international wire service. According to 
              experts, in Saudi Arabia Pepsi Cola sales are off 45 percent, and 
              Procter & Gamble Co. products, such as Pampers diapers, have 
              slid as much as 35 percent. Its turning very serious, 
              says Mahmoud El-Kaissouni, an executive with a Cairo-based industry 
              association representing 22 fast-food chains, including McDonalds, 
              Kenny Rogers Roasters and Little Caesar pizza. The number 
              of people going into these restaurants is less and less every day, 
              despite all that were doing. The association has been leading a campaign on television to warn 
              of the threat to Egyptian jobs, he said. In Morocco, the newspapers LEconomiste and Assabah have started 
              a campaign against the US dollar, printing a headline every day 
              urging Moroccans to avoid using the currency in their business dealings. Boycott the dollar in your operations for the sake of Palestine. 
              Whenever possible, opt for the euro, says the advertisement. Hamdy El-Sayed, director of the Egyptian Doctors Syndicate, 
              leads another boycott targeting American-made health care products. 
              His organization has sent doctors and pharmacies a list of US-made 
              medical supplies and tells them which local or European products 
              can be substituted. We understand this is not economically effective, because 
              people would continue to buy American goods. This action has more 
              of a symbolic value than a real effect, says El-Sayed. In 
              Jordan, Lebanon and Syria, some private hospitals have stopped buying 
              products from drug makers, including New York-based Bristol-Myers 
              Squibb.  Specialists in international trade are not worried about the effect 
              on American drug makers, saying that the Middle East represents 
              only a small portion of its business. Im wondering what they are using as alternatives over 
              there, says Douglas Christopher, analyst with New York-based 
              Crowell, Weedon & Co. Christopher says that such problems are the risk that multinational 
              companies have to live with. Its just part of the political 
              risk thats there. Marie Driscoll, analyst with Argus 
              Research who follows several fast-food chains, agrees. She cites 
              McDonalds as a good example, saying that she tries to make 
              it clear to residents in foreign countries that somebody of their 
              own nationality likely owns their local McDonalds. They 
              hire locally and source things locally, so when people hurt McDonalds 
              thinking they are hurting America, they are really hurting the local 
              citizens the most, says Driscoll. Nobody likes to see terrorism, and this is one of the ways 
              they counteract it, Driscoll adds. I think were 
              in a kind of a different world after Sept. 11 and dont know 
              if theyve addressed that. But I dont think that any 
              company has. |