NZ activists respond to Israeli fine over Lorde boycott by raising funds for Gaza charity

Two pro-Palestinian activists who were fined by Israel have responded by raising money for the Gaza Mental Health Foundation.

Lorde attends the 2018 MusiCares Person of the Year honoring Fleetwood Mac event at Radio City Music Hall in New York. .

Lorde attends the 2018 MusiCares Person of the Year honoring Fleetwood Mac event at Radio City Music Hall in New York. . Source: AAP

Two New Zealand pro-Palestinian activists have raised NZ$14,000 ($A12,800) as of Sunday for charity after being fined by an Israeli court for their alleged role in persuading pop star Lorde to cancel a concert in Tel Aviv last year.

Justine Sachs and Nadia Abu-Shanab said last week they would not pay the fine of 45,000 shekels awarded to three Israeli teenagers, calling the court’s ruling a “stunt” intended to intimidate Israel’s critics.

Instead, they asked people to donate money through website “givealittle.co.nz” to the Gaza Mental Health Foundation, a volunteer group that raises funds for mental health and women’s empowerment groups in the Gaza Strip.

As of Sunday, they raised NZ$14,000, according to the website.

“Given that we’ve actually had this kind of push upon us – we felt that it was expedient to actually recenter the issue back on Palestine,” Abu-Shanab told Radio New Zealand.

The case arose from an wrote to Lorde, a New Zealander, on the website “thespinoff.co.nz” in December urging her to call off her planned concert.

Lorde canceled her concert in Israel that same month after a campaign by the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) group, which campaigns for Palestinian rights, that included the open letter published by Sachs and Abu-Shanab.


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Published 14 October 2018 12:44pm
Source: Reuters, SBS


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