Economic Slap Shakes the Zionist Entity: Norway Expels Companies Complicit in Gaza Genocide
In a resounding international blow to the Zionist entity, Norway’s sovereign wealth fund—the largest in the world with assets exceeding $2 trillion—announced its decision to divest from six Israeli companies linked to the occupation and settlement activities in the West Bank and Gaza. The move followed a strict ethical review of the fund’s policies concerning investments in the occupied Palestinian territories.
Norway’s Sovereign Fund Raises the Red Card
This urgent and unprecedented decision marks a turning point in Western investment policies and signals the emergence of a global ethical shift tightening the noose around the temporary Zionist entity. It also paves the way for similar steps from other major financial institutions.
The fund, which invests in more than 9,000 companies worldwide, confirmed that the divestment was based on recommendations from an independent ethics watchdog. It is set to announce the names of the six blacklisted companies and the specific reasons for their expulsion once the sell-off is complete.
Reports indicate that the fund had been indirectly investing in firms supplying aircraft engines and technical services to the Zionist military—including maintenance of warplanes carrying out daily atrocities in besieged Gaza.
Gradual Collapse of Israeli Investments: 23 Companies Exit
The numbers illustrate the blow: the fund’s investments in Israel fell from 61 companies in June to 38 in August. After the latest withdrawals, the figure is expected to drop further to 32 companies, all divested on ethical grounds.
In a parallel move, the fund also terminated contracts with three asset managers handling Israel-related portfolios—a systematic dismantling of financial ties that fuel the Zionist war machine.
The Occupation Trembles: Cracks in the Israeli Economy
The ripple effects were immediate. Norway—a nation widely seen as a symbol of balanced Western policy—triggered panic across Israel’s financial sector. Questions quickly arose within the entity: Who’s next? Has Israel entered a phase of “soft isolation” at the hands of global markets?
Analysts confirm the Norwegian decision sets a legal and moral precedent within international finance. It opens the door for other countries and funds to reassess ties with companies complicit in supporting Israel—especially amid its relentless assault on Gaza since October 7, 2023.
Gaza Genocide Exposes Israel’s Partners
The Norwegian decision comes as the world witnesses unprecedented crimes of genocide in Gaza:
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Over 210,000 killed or wounded, the majority women and children.
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More than 9,000 missing under the rubble.
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Widespread famine claiming hundreds of lives, including dozens of children.
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Systematic destruction of infrastructure, with hospitals, schools, and shelters deliberately targeted.
All of this unfolds openly, in brazen defiance of international law and rulings by the International Court of Justice.
Norway’s Move: Breaking the Economic Siege on Palestine
Norway’s sovereign fund action is not just financial—it is a clear moral stance for justice and a rejection of complicity with what leading international organizations now describe as a colonial and apartheid project.
Although the Norwegian parliament in June rejected calls for a blanket divestment from all companies operating in occupied territories, the fund’s latest move underscores how ethical imperatives are shaping new realities, beyond narrow political calculations.
When Money Sides with Justice
This Norwegian move is a global cry of conscience declaring: “Enough support for criminality!” It is a call to other sovereign funds and free peoples everywhere: moral pressure can shake the foundations of colonialism when will and action converge.
Today’s development is another victory credited to Gaza’s steadfastness, and a forward step on the path to financial and economic isolation of the Zionist entity. The countdown to its demise continues—relentlessly.