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Maersk denies shipping weapons to Israel during Gaza Conflict

Maersk denied Tuesday that it had shipped arms or ammunition during Israel's war in Gaza, in response to an AGM shareholder proposal. However, the company acknowledged it had shipped military cargo.

Vincent Clerc, CEO of Maersk, told shareholders that the company has a strict no-shipping policy for weapons and ammunition into active conflict zones.

Danish shareholder group Kritiske Aktionaerer has proposed that Maersk be prohibited from shipping weapons to Israel.

In a separate proposal, the activist group Eko called on Maersk in order to increase transparency in their human rights processes. They focused in particular on areas of high risk such as arms shipments.

Clerc said that Maersk complies with all applicable laws, and also adheres to the United Nations guiding principles for business and human rights as well as OECD guidelines for responsible business conduct.

U.N. experts called on countries around the world to impose sanctions on Israel and an arms embargo, saying that Israel's campaign in Gaza, which has killed more than 48,000 Gazans according to health officials, is genocide.

Israel rejects the U.N. Report and claims it is fighting against Hamas. According to Israeli figures, Hamas fighters stormed southern Israel and killed 1,200 people and took 253 hostages.

Maersk Line, Limited, a subsidiary of Maersk Line, Limited, is a U.S. company that transports cargo to Israel on behalf of U.S. government agencies.

The shareholders rejected both shareholder proposals. Maersk Holding, a family-owned holding firm, owns 54.5% and 41.5% respectively of the Danish company's shares.

Danwatch, a Danish investigative media outlet and Ekstra Bladet, a Danish tabloid, have both reported that Maersk had sent military equipment and armoured vehicles to Israel.

Clerc stated that Maersk transports military cargo in compliance with all laws.

Clerc said: "When we make a decision about what we will accept and what we won't, we do so after careful consideration of recommendations and regulations." "We are aware that our line might not be in accordance with everyone's wishes."

Denmark, the country where Maersk has its headquarters, currently does not have an arms embargo. Nor has it imposed any restrictions regarding weapons sent to Israel. Reporting by Louise Rasmussen, Jacob GronholtPedersen. Terje Solsvik (Editing by Mark Potter, David Evans and Terje Evans).

(source: Reuters)