The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against Israel won a legal battle when a court in France Monday overturned a government ban on a meeting to support people facing trial for pro-Palestinian activism.
The mayor’s office of Toulouse banned the meeting last Thursday, but the it was overturned by the Toulouse administrative court Monday, ordering a space to be provided for the meeting. The court stated that the ban was “a grave and manifestly illegal infringement of the fundamental freedom of assembly,” The Electronic Intifada reported.
The meeting was then able to go ahead as planned on Tuesday in a public facility. The meeting was in support of four Palestinian rights activists who are facing trial in June for handing out information that called for the boycott of Israeli goods.
The BDS movement aims to put political and economic pressure on Israel for their occupation of Palestine. The movement seeks to lobby organizations, corporations, artists and academic institutions to cut ties with Israel. The movement hopes that boycotting Israel will help the cause of Palestinian independence and delegitimize the state of Israel.
The French government has been overly critical of the BDS movement and has been supportive of Israel. Online payment company PayPal in March decided to block money transfers to the French branch of the BDS movement.
In February, Canada passed a motion in their parliament to formally condemn attempts to promote the BDS movement against Israel.
A number of human rights and civil liberty groups have supported the BDS movement including the French based International Federation for Human Rights. The governments of Sweden, the Netherlands and Ireland have recently given their support to the BDS movement.