KrF says NO to Israeli leftist politics



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Norway can get its most favorable government to Israel for decades.

Stortings representative Kjell Ingolf Ropstad is the favorite after Knut Arild Hareide. (Photo: KrF)
Stortings representative Kjell Ingolf Ropstad is the favorite after Knut Arild Hareide. (Photo: KrF)

The extraordinary National Assembly of the Christian People's Party rejected Israeli left-wing politics on Friday, November 2nd.

They said NO to a prime minister who thinks Israel is an apartheid state.

They said NO to the total boycott of LO and to a policy that would make Israel disappear.

They said NO to mark the goods made by Jews, according to some Norwegian fathers, who live in the wrong place.

They said NO to a supporting party that supports violations of international law and works for free access to Hamas Islamist weapons.

They said NO to parties that adopted a boycott of Israeli settlements in a number of municipalities and NOT to cooperate with government ministers who support these decisions.

They said NO to the unilateral recognition by Norway of a Palestinian state. This would have undermined international law and the Oslo accords. This will solve nothing, just opened a new chapter of the conflict, probably more bloody.

Now, however, the KrF can exert considerable pressure to create an even better policy for Norway and for Israel and to revive bilateral relations. There is great potential in the fields of technology, medicine and safety, but especially in energy.

KrF can make Norway a constructive force for real peace among others

– use economic pressures to prevent Palestinian terrorists from being rewarded, the tribute of terrorists and the fundamental reforms of UNRWA.

– to reject the Palestinians' right to the so-called "right of return".

– ensure the implementation of government policies refusing to support boycott organizations

KrF can get that easier now than if he were a negotiator and prime minister who considers Israel as an apartheid state. With a Minister of Foreign Affairs or an Assistant Minister of the KrF, this can also be completed.

Israeli friends across the country will do the same.

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Conrad Myrland (born 1979) is the Managing Director and Editor-in-Chief of MIFF. He developed the site during his free time from January 2001 to July 2007. Since August 2007, Myrland has been working full time for MIFF. Myrland graduated in economics and administration from Stavanger University College and studied internet at Curtin University of Technology in Perth, Australia. From 2001 to 2005, he was editor-in-chief, publisher and journalist for the local newspaper Solabladet. Myrland has been a contributor to MIFF member states, the Middle East, since 1995.


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