Palestine Action Victory: Barclays divests from Israeli weapons firm Elbit Systems

London (Quds News Network)- British banking giant Barclays has totally sold all of its investment shareholdings in Elbit Systems Ltd (ELST), Israel’s largest weapons manufacturer, after a year-long campaign against its premises by pro-Palestine campaigning groups.

According to Palestine Action, a British activist group that has been protesting against the bank’s investments in Israel, Barclays has until recently owned over 16,000 shares in Elbit Systems.

Barclays owned zero shares in Elbit Systems, down 16,345 since the previous filing, dated 15 May 2024, worth over $3.4m, according to the latest US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filings.

“The most recent SEC filings and NASDAQ data record an immediate total sale of Barclays’ ELST shares, abruptly sold just when Palestine Action’s campaign hit them hardest,” Palestine Action said.

A Barclays spokesperson denied that the company has been a shareholder in Elbit Systems.

“Barclays trades in shares of listed companies in response to client instruction or demand and that may result in us holding shares,” the spokesperson said.

“We are not making investments for Barclays and Barclays is not a ‘shareholder’ or ‘investor’ in Elbit Systems in that sense, and therefore cannot divest; it would be misleading to suggest otherwise.

“We continue provide a range of financial services to the defence sector, including US, UK and European defence companies.”

Palestine Action has undertaken 54 protest actions across the UK against Barclays over the past 12 months, including smashing windows of the bank’s branches and spraying them in blood-red paint, many of these actions put Barclays sites out of operation for weeks.

The group said its actions sought to raise the costs associated with dealing with Elbit, which it said was a major contributor in genocidal acts against Palestinians in Gaza since Israel’s war on the enclave began in October 2023.

Palestine Action has previously targeted Elbit Systems in protests that occasionally involve physical damage and occupation of British properties associated with the company.

The group says it has “adopted radical direct action tactics which include sabotage of key infrastructure to physically prevent continued support for destructive and lethal business operations”.

Several activists who targeted Barclays have been arrested over the past year accused of causing damage costing between £250,000 to £500,000 in value.

“Through a focused strategy, direct action has achieved multiple successes and forced the hands of many complicit institutions,” a Palestine Action spokesperson said.

“We will remain committed and focused to the task at hand and target any and all institutions and businesses which enable Israel’s biggest weapons firm to maintain their genocidal operations. That means, if Barclays does reinvest into Elbit Systems in the future, Palestine Action will come knocking again.”

Initial research published in July 2022 by Campaign Against Arms Trade, War on Want and Palestine Solidarity Campaign showed the bank held shareholdings worth over £1.5billion in companies complicit with Israeli apartheid.

The list of firms in which the financial giant is reported to have interests includes General Dynamics, a US arms firm that produces components for warplanes. Other firms include BAE Systems and Raytheon.

In response to the report, Barclays said it provides services to American, British and European companies “that supply defense products to Nato and its allies”.

In August, the Financial Times reported that Barclays was planning to withdraw from new Israel government bond auctions amid pressure from pro-Palestine activists.

The report said the bank was trying to address criticism of its investments in Israel.

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