The Lawfare Project has had a longstanding legal battle against
Kuwait Airways for its refusal to fly Israeli passengers. The organization represented "an Israeli traveller who booked a ticket with Kuwait Airways to fly from Frankfurt to Bangkok, only to be refused at the last minute when it emerged that he was an Israeli citizen." Through January 2018, the Lawfare Project's Spanish attorney, Ignacio Wenley Palacios, had secured 46 writs of injunction and court decisions against the
Boycotts of Israel in Spain. A court issued an interim injunction against the city council of
Castrillón for its boycott of Israeli products and a court in
Barcelona annulled a boycott passed by the city council of
El Prat de Llobregat. According to Palacios, the Lawfare Project had succeeded in establishing a legal doctrine that "boycotts of Israel infringe on human rights, violate free speech and are tantamount to discrimination on account of national origin and personal opinions." In June 2017, the Lawfare Project and the law firm
Winston & Strawn filed a lawsuit against
San Francisco State University (SFSU) on behalf of a group of SFSU students and members of the local Jewish community, alleging that the public school had fostered a climate of anti-Semitism "marked by violent threats to the safety of Jewish students on campus." The suit alleged "that the school has violated the plaintiffs' constitutional rights to free speech and equal protection, as well as a provision of the Civil Rights Act." In addition to the federal lawsuit, the Lawfare Project and Winston & Strawn filed a second lawsuit in February 2018 against SFSU in the Superior Court of California for the County of San Francisco. California Superior Court Judge Richard Ulmer Jr. scheduled the trial to take place on March 4, 2019. In November 2017, the Lawfare Project supported a lawsuit by the Belgian Federation of Jewish Organizations (CCOJB) against a ban on
shechita, the Jewish ritual religious slaughter of animals, in
Wallonia, Belgium. In January 2018, the Lawfare Project supported a second lawsuit by CCOJB for restrictions on
shechita in
Flanders. , the Lawfare Project was preparing a lawsuit against the Irish
Occupied Territories Bill, which, if enacted, would prohibit trade with territories considered illegally occupied under international law, including but not limited to
Israeli-occupied territories. The Lawfare Project described the bill as a "highly aggressive anti-Israel boycott policy within a national government that targets individuals not based on their conduct, but on their national origin and place of residence" and argued that it violates European Union trade regulations. ==References==