SodaStream was a prominent target of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Campaign and CODEPINK, because it operated a factory in the West Bank, territory that Palestinians claim as theirs.
Comment: It's not a "claim", but a legal reality. The West bank is Palestinian land and always has been. Israel has illegally annexed and occupied it.
An Agence France-Presse photographer captured images Monday of the laid-off Palestinian workers sobbing as they said goodbye to their Israeli colleagues following a decision by the company to move its factory out of the West Bank.
"We're heartened by all the support that everyone has shown us, but in the end, when I get up tomorrow, I won't have a job to go to," Yasin Abu Ateek, a 29-year-old father of two who worked for SodaStream for six years told the Jerusalem Post.
The Post, quoting the company, reported that the Palestinian employees each supported an average of 10 other people with their income.
"All the people who wanted to close [the factory] are mistaken. ... They didn't take into consideration the families," Ali Jafar, a Palestinian shift manager, told The Guardian in September.
"SodaStream should have been encouraged in the West Bank if [the BDS movement] truly cared about the Palestinian people," SodaStream CEO Daniel Birnbaum told the British paper then.
The company moved its operations a two-hour drive away from its original plant to southern Israel in October, citing financial reasons; however, BDS activists had hailed it as a victory of their campaign.
The company employed more than 500 Palestinians and boasted that all employees regardless of nationality and ethnicity received equal pay and benefits for comparable jobs.
When it relocated the factory to southern Israel, SodaStream had planned to bus in 74 of its Palestinian workers two hours in each direction every day; however, the Israeli government did not grant the Palestinians work permits that would have allowed them to enter Israel.
"Today is their final day working with the company, sadly," SodaStream spokesman Maayan Nave told AFP on Monday.
The Israeli Defense Ministry's branch COGAT, which handles Israeli-Palestinian civilian ties, did not comment on why the 74 did not receive permits to work in Israel but released this statement: "COGAT has taken many measures to help the factory and provided temporary permits to hundreds of laborers in the past year and a half to enable the transfer [of the factory]."
Israelis have been on edge given a five-month wave of nearly daily Palestinian stabbing attacks in Israelis, including an ax attack on Friday at a mall just a 10-minute drive from the former West Bank SodaStream plant in Mishor Adumim outside Jerusalem. The main suspect in the stabbing was a worker at the mall who held a work permit, according to Israeli media reports.
Johansson faced pressure from BDS activists two years ago after she took the position of brand ambassador for the carbonated beverage kit.
David Horovitz, the founding editor of the Times of Israel, in an op-ed Monday slammed the boycott Israel activists given the huge layoff of Palestinian employees.
"Proponents of BDS purport to act in the interests of Palestinians, specifically their quest for independence. It is doubtful that the hundreds of unemployed former Palestinian workers of SodaStream see it that way," Horovitz wrote.
Comment: Pul-eeeze! Tears from an Israeli publisher over the plight of unemployed Palestinians?
"And as of Monday, all of its Palestinian employees are out of work. What a challenge now, for them, to feed their families, to keep their children safe and prevent them from succumbing to the prevailing hatreds," he wrote, adding, "Well done, BDS campaign. A great victory for Palestine. A great step forward on the way to... what, exactly?"
Comment: True enough, the plant closure is bad for the employees and their families. Notice though, the article spins on sympathy for the individuals while disparaging the goal of BDS supporters. This obfuscates the larger picture, which is that: