
Maersk AGM to vote on halting arms shipment to Israel amid Gaza war
Owners of shipping giant Maersk will vote on Tuesday on a shareholder proposal to halt any shipments of arms to Israel for as long as there is a war in Gaza, a proposition the Danish company has so far dismissed.
United Nations experts have called on countries to impose sanctions and an arms embargo on Israel, arguing that Israel's military campaign in Gaza since October 7, 2023, in which Gaza health officials say more than 48,000 people have died, amounted to genocide.
Israel has strongly rejected the UN report and says it is combating Islamist group Hamas, whose fighters stormed into southern Israel, killing 1,200 and taking 253 hostages by Israeli tallies.
The proposal to ban Maersk from shipping arms to Israel, which was put forward by Danish shareholder group Kritiske Aktionærer, is on the agenda for Tuesday's annual general meeting (AGM).
Maersk said the company's board did not support the proposal.
'The premise of the proposal is not correct, as the company is not transporting arms to Israel,' Maersk said.
Activist group Eko in a separate proposal called for Maersk to enact greater transparency in its human rights processes, particularly focusing on high-risk areas including arms shipments.
Maersk's board said it also did not support Eko's proposal.
Eko said in a statement the company's denial of arms shipments came despite Danish media pointing to the contrary.
Investigative media outlet Danwatch and Danish tabloid Ekstra Bladet have reported bills of ladings from Maersk, which showed it had shipped armored combat vehicles and other military hardware to Israel.

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