Popular boycott forced KFC to close branches in Malaysia

Popular boycott forced KFC to close branches in Malaysia

KFC has closed 108 branches in Malaysia due to popular boycott that followed the company’s support for the Gaza war.

The American restaurant has temporarily closed 108 branches in Malaysia due to popular popular boycott triggered by the company’s support for Israel’s attacks on Gaza campaigns supporting the Palestinian people.

Singaporean newspaper The Strait Times said KFC had suspended operations in Malaysia on Monday.

Read more: Gaza: World Central Kitchen to resume aid a month after staff killed in Israeli strik

Kentucky branches have been nearly empty of customers for a week, the newspaper said, citing restaurant workers.

Since October 7, 2023, the Zionist regime has waged a devastating war in the Gaza Strip that, in addition to an unprecedented humanitarian disaster and massive destruction of infrastructure, has left tens of thousands of civilian victims, most of them children and women.

The Zionist regime continues its devastating war against Gaza despite the immediate resolution of the ceasefire by the UN Security Council.

In this regard, people around the world, especially those in Muslim countries, have boycotted companies that support the Zionist regime. Kentucky was not alone in the boycott, and McDonald’s suffered losses.

McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczynski recently acknowledged that the company has seen a meaningful commercial impact in the wake of a massive boycott by its customers, raising shareholder concerns about the chain’s regional and global activities.

UK’s 2nd-huge trade union backs anti-Israel boycott movement

The second-largest trade union in Britain has criticized UK government legislation prohibiting institutions from boycotting goods made in occupied territories and stated its support for pro-Palestine Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movements against the Israeli government.

Unite, one of 15 trade unions affiliated with the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) and representing 1.2 million British workers, passed three motions supporting BDS at its conference on Friday. The motions demanded that the government repeal the Economic Activity of Public Bodies (Overseas Matters) legislation, which prohibits public bodies from launching their own boycott campaigns that specifically mention the Israeli regime and the occupied territories.

read more: Algerian athletes boycott international tournament after Israel’s participation

The relevant motion stated that the bill “seeks to limit public bodies’ ability to make ethical decisions about spending and investment that reflect broad public support for human rights, climate goals, and international law.”

The motion also emphasized Unite’s backing of Popular boycott campaigns against businesses linked to the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories.

The union also committed during the conference to encourage its members to support the Right to Boycott campaign and sign a petition opposing the government bill.

The unanimous support of Unite’s members for motions affirming support for Popular boycott is crucial, according to PSC Director Ben Jamal, at a time when the government’s anti-boycott bill aims to undermine the legitimacy of the Palestinian call for boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS).

He continued, “United has made clear that it will continue to stand shoulder to shoulder with the Palestinian people and reject all efforts to delegitimize their struggle for liberation.

PSC further noted that the legislation would “protect companies engaged in human rights abuse or environmental destruction by prohibiting public bodies from cutting financial ties with them over abusive or illegal actions committed in a foreign state unless expressly permitted to do so by the government.”

Another motion adopted at the conference called for the British government to renounce its free-trade agreement with the occupying force and reaffirmed the union’s recognition of the Israeli regime as engaging in apartheid.

The conference’s final motion addressed the Israeli military’s designation of six Palestinian civil society and human rights organizations as “terrorist” groups.

The conference emphasized that the targeted organizations “provide services and support to women, children, farmers, and prisoners, and collectively support thousands of Palestinians,” adding that this is a “direct assault in an effort to isolate and restrict human rights defenders.”

Unite urged the Israeli government to retract its “spurious” claims and the UK government to reiterate its support for Palestinian civil society.

Over 170 Palestinian organizations advocating for “various forms of boycott against Israel until it meets its obligations under international law” launched the BDS movement in 2005. It is modeled after the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa.”

Since then, thousands of volunteers from all over the world have joined the BDS movement, which urges individuals and organizations to sever all ties with Tel Aviv in order to support the Palestinian cause.

Pro-Israel organizations have referred to the movement as “an existential threat” because it has effectively hurt the Tel Aviv government’s economy.”

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