Israeli PM Lapid Refuses to Meet with Norway’s Foreign Minister

Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid. (File photo: AFP)
Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid. (File photo: AFP)
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Israeli PM Lapid Refuses to Meet with Norway’s Foreign Minister

Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid. (File photo: AFP)
Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid. (File photo: AFP)

Israel’s Foreign Minister Yair Lapid decided not to meet his Norwegian counterpart Anniken Huitfeldt during her visit to Israel in September.

Diplomatic sources in Tel Aviv said Lapid's decision comes in protest against Norway’s announcement in June to label products from Israeli settlements with their place of origin.

They stressed that Israel had failed to convince relevant Norwegian authorities to retract this decision.

Sources noted that Huitfeldt will visit Israel and the West Bank to participate in the International Donor Group for Palestine’s meeting.

Norway is the largest donor country to the Palestinian Authority. It helped to broker the 1993 and 1995 Oslo Accords, which provided for interim and limited Palestinian self-rule in the occupied territories.

Deputy Director General of Israel's Foreign Affairs Ministry Aliza Bin-Noun had met with Norway's Ambassador to Israel, Kare Reidar Aas, who conveyed to her the Norwegian minister’s request to meet with Lapid.

In response, Bin-Noun recalled to the ambassador Norway's negative moves toward Israel and claimed that the upcoming elections make it “impossible” to hold a meeting with the Prime Minister.

The European Commission recommended its member states to follow this practice in 2015, a decision confirmed by the European Court of Justice in 2019.

Norway said that the principle behind its decision, as set out in the 2019 ruling, is that consumers should not be deceived by misleading labelling on the origin or products.



3 Pakistani Soldiers and 8 Militants Killed During a Raid on Insurgents' Hideout

Pakistani security official stands guard at a checkpoint in Karachi, Pakistan, 29 October 2024.  EPA/REHAN KHAN
Pakistani security official stands guard at a checkpoint in Karachi, Pakistan, 29 October 2024. EPA/REHAN KHAN
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3 Pakistani Soldiers and 8 Militants Killed During a Raid on Insurgents' Hideout

Pakistani security official stands guard at a checkpoint in Karachi, Pakistan, 29 October 2024.  EPA/REHAN KHAN
Pakistani security official stands guard at a checkpoint in Karachi, Pakistan, 29 October 2024. EPA/REHAN KHAN

Three soldiers and eight militants were killed after Pakistani security forces backed by military helicopters raided a hideout in a former stronghold of insurgents in a restive province bordering Afghanistan on Wednesday, police said.
A local militant commander was believed to be among those killed in the operation in Bannu, a district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, local police official Zahid Ullah said.
The military said a major was among the soldiers “martyred” during the intelligence-based operation, adding that its forces were going after other militants in the area "to wipe out the menace of terrorism”, The Associated Press reported.
Authorities often carry out such operations against the Pakistani Taliban, who are known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP.
The TTP — an ally of the Afghan Taliban despite being a separate group — has stepped up its assaults in the region since the Taliban seized power in Afghanistan in 2021.
Government forces have also intensified their operations against separatist groups based in the restive southwestern Balochistan province.