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Report Claims Israeli Settlement Goods Enter Europe Under Mislabelled Origin

(MENAFN) A new investigation has alleged that agricultural products produced in Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories and the occupied Syrian Golan are continuing to reach European markets under labels identifying them as originating from Israel.

The findings were published in a report titled *Importing Occupation* by the Global Echo Litigation Center, which claims that settlement-produced goods are frequently exported as Israeli products despite European Union regulations requiring clear differentiation between goods produced within Israel and those originating in territories occupied since 1967.

According to the report, companies involved in retail and food production may be contributing to consumer misinformation by labeling settlement goods simply as “from Israel,” rather than specifying origins such as “West Bank (Israeli settlement)” or “Golan Heights (Israeli settlement).”

Researchers examined more than 30,000 export records, covering 6,827 agricultural shipments sent from Israel between October 2017 and February 2026.

The analysis suggests that over 17% of agricultural exports to Europe included goods originating in Israeli settlements. For shipments specifically destined for European Union member states, the proportion was reported to rise to nearly 20%.

The report also outlines several methods it claims are used to obscure the origin of these products, including listing settlement-based production sites as Israeli locations, using addresses within Israel that do not correspond to actual production sites, and blending settlement goods with products made within Israel before export.

“What emerges is not a story of isolated error, but of systematic concealment: settlement produce are hidden in plain sight, redirected through sham addresses, or mingled with goods from within Israel’s recognized borders until legal distinction is dissolved in bureaucratic practice,” the report stated.

Researchers argue that shortcomings in EU labeling enforcement have allowed such goods to continue entering European markets under generalized Israeli origin labels, limiting transparency for consumers regarding the actual source of the products.

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