One in three people are boycotting brands over Israel's war on Gaza, poll finds
Oil-rich Gulf states and large Muslim-majority
countries are leading the way, suggesting deep anger with Israel over its
offensive
By MEE staff
Published date: 14 June 2024
More than one in three people say they are boycotting
a brand viewed as supporting a side in Israel's war on Gaza, with oil-rich Gulf
states and large Muslim-majority countries leading the way.
The latest edition of an annual Trust Barometer report from public
relations firm Edelman underscored how sharp divides over the war are causing
consumers across the globe to take a stance with their wallets.
The survey polled 15,000 consumers across 15
countries, including France, Saudi Arabia, the UK and the US.
The poll didn't say who respondents sided with in the
war, but out of the top five countries listed as engaged on boycotting brands
over Gaza, three are Muslim-majority nations: Saudi Arabia, the UAE and
Indonesia. India also has a sizeable Muslim minority. Germany was the fifth
country.
The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement
has gained traction across the world as it aims to put pressure on Israel over
its violations of international law and repression of Palestinians. However, it
has also faced stiff opposition in the US and other western states where
sizeable numbers of the population are sympathetic to Israel.
Saudi Arabia saw the highest number of respondents, 71
percent, saying that they were boycotting brands over their perceived support
for one side.
Saudi Arabia's population is overwhelmingly
pro-Palestine.
A poll conducted in December by the Washington
Institute for Near Eastern Affairs, a pro-Israel think tank, found that 96
percent of Saudi nationals believe Arab countries should cut ties
with Israel in response to its war on Gaza.
Before the war, the US was actively working towards an
agreement that would see Israel and Saudi Arabia normalise relations.
In the UAE, 57 percent of respondents said they were
boycotting brands over the war.
In Indonesia, the world's largest Muslim-majority
country, more than one in two people also said they were boycotting brands.
The number of respondents from Arab and Muslim
countries who are boycotting products over the war on Gaza is substantially
higher than the global average of 37 percent, slightly more than one in three
respondents.
'Consumer nationalism' soars in the Gulf
The boycotts are being felt in Western corporate
boardrooms.
In March, retail giant Alshaya Group, which owns the
rights to Starbucks in the Middle East, decided to begin laying off over 2,000 staff in the region and
North Africa, or four percent of its total workforce, as a result of consumer
boycotts linked to Gaza.
McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski also said earlier
this year that sales had been weaker in Muslim-majority countries - such
as Malaysia and Indonesia - as well as across the Middle East.
McDonald's sparked outrage among pro-Palestine activists in October
when its Israel franchise announced it was giving free meals to Israeli soldiers in its branches in the country. In
Pakistan, the franchise dropped its prices and was forced to put out a
statement distancing themselves from McDonald's in Israel.
"The ongoing impact of the war on these
franchisees' local business is disheartening and ill-founded," Kempczinski
said on Monday, speaking to analysts on the company's conference call.
Consumers in the Gulf region have long been a prize
for Western corporations because their young populations have relatively high
purchasing power. Their oil and gas-producing economies have not been hit by
wars and crises like other Arab states since the Arab Spring.
Middle East Eye has reported how consumers in Oman, a key Western partner,
have been boycotting western goods over the support the US and its allies have
provided Israel. They have switched from drinks like Mountain Dew to Kinsa, a
Saudi drink brand. In Pakistan, local brands have started producing local
products to replace western soft drinks and cosmetics.
The poll also picked up on rising consumer nationalism
in Gulf states. The number of respondents in Saudi Arabia and the UAE saying
they are buying their country's brands over foreign ones jumped 13 and 10
points, respectively.
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