[LCM Articles] Lebanese union to sue Israel for 'claiming ownership' of falafel

Deena Sharuk dsharuk at gmail.com
Wed Oct 8 10:23:20 EDT 2008


Last update - 20:39 06/10/2008       Lebanese union to sue Israel for
'claiming ownership' of falafel    By DPA    Tags:
Lebanon<http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/tags/index.jhtml?tag=Lebanon>,
israel news<http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/tags/index.jhtml?tag=israel+news>,
food <http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/tags/index.jhtml?tag=food>
A new war between Israel and Lebanon has erupted, but this time the war is
not geopolitical, but rather an issue of cuisine-who has sovereignty over
traditional Arab dishes and sandwiches.

The president of the Lebanese Industrialists Association Fadi Abboud, said
he is preparing to file an international lawsuit against Israel for
allegedly "taking the identity of some Lebanese foods" and thus violating a
food copyright.

"In a way the Jewish state is trying to claim ownership of traditional
Lebanese delicacies like falafel, tabouleh and hummus" Abboud said.
According to Abboud, the Lebanese are losing "tens of millions of dollars
annually" because Israel is selling and marketing traditional Lebanese
dishes.

"The Israelis are marketing our main food dishes as if they were Israeli
dishes," he charged.

"We are working on registering all the foods and ingredients which will be
submitted to the Lebanese government so it can appeal to the international
courts against Israel," Abboud said.

"The Israelis are marketing such Lebanese delicacies under the same names
and ingredients around the world," he added. "This is harming and causing
great losses to Lebanon."

Abboud said he prepared his memo on the subject, based on the case of the
Greek "feta cheese precedent" that occurred six years ago.

At the time, Greece managed to prove in international institutions that it
was the "originator" of feta cheese and won the case.

According to Abboud, while Lebanon never registered the names and
ingredients of its own delicacies, "it can refer to the Greece precedent
since these foods are historically known as traditional Lebanese foods.

"By doing so, we are preventing Israel from stealing our main food
trademarks and selling them around the world," Abboud added

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1027016.html
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