Table of Contents
Nando’s is a South African-origin quick-service restaurant group founded in Johannesburg in 1987, operating approximately 1,600 restaurants globally under a franchise and company-owned model. Its principal product is peri-peri chicken, and its commercial identity is rooted in South African and Portuguese-Mozambican cultural heritage. It is privately held, majority-controlled by South African private interests including the Enthoven family, and is not publicly listed on any exchange.
The BDS-1000 assessment returns a composite score of 130 (Tier E), the lowest tier. Two of the four scored domains — V-MIL (Military) and V-DIG (Digital) — return zero scores on the basis of comprehensive null findings across all relevant sub-categories. The scoring is driven entirely by two domains: V-ECON, reflecting a historical direct franchise licensing relationship with an Israeli operator (the Agamim Group), and V-POL, reflecting Nando’s corporate communications posture — specifically, its sustained public silence on the Israel-Palestine conflict against a documented prior history of political and social commentary in its South African advertising.
No defence contracts, dual-use products, weapons supply relationships, or military technology provision of any kind have been identified. No Israeli-origin enterprise software deployment, surveillance technology, cloud infrastructure participation, or digital supply-chain relationship with Israeli state or security entities has been confirmed. No Israeli-origin product sourcing, Israeli direct investment, Israeli beneficial ownership, or Israeli operational presence beyond the historical franchise has been identified.
The two non-zero scores are grounded in confirmed, if historically bounded, facts: a direct commercial franchise licence with the Agamim Group for Israeli restaurant operations, and the direct corporate communications choices made by Nando’s Group Holdings. Both are scored conservatively, with material uncertainty acknowledged regarding the current operational status of the franchise. The composite BRS is robustly within Tier E under all evidence-supportable interpretations; no evidence base exists across the four audits that would support reclassification to Tier D or higher.
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1987 | Nando’s founded in Rosettenville, Johannesburg, by Robert Brozin and Fernando Duarte; brand identity rooted in South African and Mozambican-Portuguese culinary heritage 1 |
| c. 2011 | Robert Brozin departs active executive leadership role at Nando’s 1 |
| c. 2013–2015 | Nando’s Israel franchise launched under the Agamim Group as local franchise partner; branded restaurants active in Israeli cities 2 |
| 2020 | Nando’s South Africa issues advertising aligned with Black Lives Matter, affirming an anti-racism brand stance — part of a documented history of political satire and social commentary in domestic advertising 3 |
| 2021 | Nando’s UK Modern Slavery Act transparency statement published; addresses labour risk in supply chain; no Israeli or settlement-origin sourcing referenced 4 |
| February 2020 (updated through 2023) | UN OHCHR publishes and updates database of businesses with activities in Israeli settlements; Nando’s does not appear in the database 5 |
| October 7, 2023 | Hamas attack on Israel; subsequent Israeli military operations in Gaza; onset of period generating broad consumer boycott pressure on brands with Israeli connections |
| October–November 2023 | Nando’s UK social media activity remains product- and lifestyle-focused; no corporate statement on the conflict issued; consumer-facing boycott mentions of Nando’s circulate on social media citing historical Israeli franchise presence 6 7 |
| Late 2023 (unconfirmed) | Unverified social-media claim circulates alleging Nando’s briefly included an Israeli flag emoji in a promotional campaign before removing it; claim not confirmed by any named publication 8 |
| c. 2022–2024 | Operational status of Agamim Group franchise network reported as unclear in training-data coverage; possible contraction indicated but no official corporate confirmation of exit or continuation identified 2 |
| 2026-05-01 | BDS-1000 audit and scoring compiled; franchise current status remains an open question 9 |
Nando’s was established in 1987 when Robert Brozin and Fernando Duarte purchased and rebranded a Rosettenville, Johannesburg restaurant originally called “Chickenland.” The brand’s identity is architecturally grounded in South African township culture and the Afro-Portuguese culinary tradition of peri-peri chicken, with its signature PERi-PERi (African Bird’s Eye Chilli) sauce publicly sourced from Mozambique and South Africa.1 The company has no Israeli founding origin, no Israeli-origin brand in its portfolio, and no acquisition history connecting it to an Israeli business entity.
Nando’s Group Holdings Ltd is a South African private company. The primary UK operating entity — trading as Chickenland Ltd and Nando’s Holdings (UK) Ltd — is incorporated in England and Wales.10 The company is not listed on any stock exchange, does not publish consolidated group-level financial statements accessible to the public, and is not subject to public procurement disclosure obligations. Majority control rests with South African private interests: the Brozin family and the Enthoven family via Entsha Investment Holdings, with the broader Enthoven financial ecosystem linked to Rand Merchant Bank and Discovery Ltd structures — all South African-domiciled entities.1 No Israeli-domiciled controlling party appears on any Companies House Person of Significant Control register for Nando’s UK entities.10
From a global footprint perspective, Nando’s operates across approximately 30+ countries. Israel is not referenced in any known annual report, investor presentation, press release, or regulatory filing as a current, target, or prospective market.10 Its Middle East presence is limited to select Gulf Cooperation Council states. The historical Israeli franchise operation — discussed in detail under V-ECON and V-POL — was conducted under a local franchise licence with the Agamim Group; whether that arrangement remains operational as of the audit date is unconfirmed.2
Nando’s commercial footprint is confined to civilian retail hospitality, branded condiments, and franchise licensing. It has no manufacturing operations, no technology product lines, no construction or engineering activities, and no defence-sector contracting history in any jurisdiction. This corporate profile is structurally remote from the categories of entity typically identified in defence procurement, dual-use technology, or occupation-related economic participation records.
Nando’s presents a structurally null profile across every sub-category of the V-MIL domain. It holds no defence contracts, has never appeared in any defence procurement registry, and operates exclusively in the civilian food-service sector. The analytical chain from corporate profile to a nil V-MIL score is direct and requires explanation rather than mere assertion: the absence of findings is the product of affirmative inquiry across a comprehensive set of source categories, not investigative incompleteness.
On direct defence contracting, no public evidence has been identified of Nando’s holding, seeking, or having held any agreement with the Israeli Ministry of Defence, the IDF, Israel Prison Service, Israel Border Police, or any other Israeli state security body.11 The company does not appear in SIBAT (Israel’s Defence Export Directorate) listings,12 international defence exhibition catalogues, or any Israeli or international defence procurement registry. No corporate press release, government announcement, or defence trade publication has documented any defence cooperation, joint venture, or formal partnership between Nando’s and any Israeli security entity. This is the expected finding for a quick-service restaurant group: Nando’s has no products, capabilities, or infrastructure that would create a pathway into defence procurement.
On dual-use products, the question is structurally inapplicable. Nando’s entire product portfolio consists of food-service items: peri-peri sauces, marinades, restaurant meals, and packaged condiments.13 No ruggedised, tactical, mil-spec, or defence-grade product variant exists. No export licence applications or end-user certificates related to Nando’s sales to Israeli defence or security end-users appear in the UK’s SPIRE strategic export licensing system,14 South Africa’s NCACC records,15 or EU dual-use export control databases. The rubric’s dual-use criteria require a product that can serve both civilian and military functions; food-service condiments do not satisfy this threshold under any standard dual-use framework.
On heavy machinery, construction equipment, and settlement infrastructure, the finding is again structural non-applicability. Nando’s has no supply chain in earth-moving machinery, armoured vehicles, construction plant, or related categories. No verified report, NGO investigation, photographic evidence, or UN documentation places any Nando’s-owned or Nando’s-supplied equipment at Israeli military installations, settlements, checkpoints, or along the separation barrier.16 17
On supply chain integration with Israeli defence primes — Elbit Systems, Israel Aerospace Industries, Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, and IMI/Elbit Land — no relationship in any supplier directory, corporate filing, or investigative report has been identified.18 Nando’s does not produce optical systems, electronic sub-assemblies, propulsion components, structural materials, guidance systems, communication modules, armour materials, or any other category of input relevant to Israeli defence prime supply chains. The absence of such findings is consistent with the company’s commercial profile.
On logistical sustainment and base services, the audit identifies one area requiring more careful framing: Nando’s historical Israel franchise operations. The franchise model places primary responsibility for site selection and local commercial relationships with the Agamim Group franchisee, not with Nando’s Group Holdings directly. No evidence has been identified that any Israeli Nando’s franchise site is co-located with, or contractually services, a military installation. However, one genuine evidence gap cannot be resolved: whether a local Israeli food-service sub-contractor or caterer operating under a Nando’s franchise arrangement holds a local catering contract with an IDF facility. Such sub-tier arrangements are not publicly disclosed. This gap is noted transparently and does not constitute a positive finding.
On munitions, weapons systems, and strategic platforms, no evidence has been identified across any sub-category: no role as prime contractor, sub-contractor, licensed manufacturer, or component supplier; no involvement in the Iron Dome, David’s Sling, Arrow, or related Israeli strategic air-defence programmes; no supply of munitions, precursor materials, guidance electronics, fire-control systems, or related sub-systems.12
The absence of civil society scrutiny specifically addressing Nando’s in a military context is itself corroborating evidence. Nando’s does not appear in the Who Profits database in a military supply-chain context.11 It does not appear in AFSC “Investigate” platform entries relating to Israeli defence-sector involvement.18 No Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Corporate Occupation, or Profundo report specifically names Nando’s in a military supply context.16 17
The strongest challenge to the nil V-MIL score is the set of structural evidence gaps that cannot be fully resolved from public sources. Three warrant specific attention.
First, the Israeli franchise sub-tier catering question: it is logically possible that a local sub-contractor operating under a Nando’s franchise licence provides food services to an IDF facility. However, this is speculative — no positive evidence of such an arrangement has been identified, and the inference chain (franchise licence → local sub-contractor → IDF catering contract) involves multiple unconfirmed intermediary steps. The rubric requires affirmative evidence of a supply relationship, not merely its logical possibility. Under the directionality rule, a speculative sub-tier possibility is insufficient to move the score above zero.
Second, UK SPIRE export control data is published in aggregated form by destination country and product category, not by named exporter. Nando’s UK entity cannot be individually traced in published SPIRE outputs, meaning any export licence for Nando’s products to Israeli defence end-users — however implausible given the product category — cannot be individually confirmed or excluded.14 Similarly, South Africa’s NCACC export records are not comprehensively public.15 These are structural data limitations, not suppressed positives; the directionality of the evidence strongly disfavours a positive finding given the product category.
Third, the Who Profits database could not be queried via live web access during research. The assessment of Nando’s absence from the database relies on training-data coverage and cannot be treated as fully confirmed without a live direct query.11 This gap is formally noted; it does not alter the overall conclusion given the strength of the structural analysis.
What would need to change for V-MIL to score above zero? A positive finding would require confirmed direct evidence in one of the following categories: a defence contract or catering agreement with an IDF facility specifically linked to a Nando’s entity; a dual-use product certification or export licence to Israeli security end-users; or credible investigative reporting placing Nando’s products or infrastructure in a military support role. None of these conditions are satisfied on the available evidence, and Nando’s commercial profile makes all of them structurally implausible.
| Entity | Type | Relevance | Finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nando’s Group Holdings Ltd | Parent company | Subject of audit | No defence contracts or relationships identified |
| Chickenland Ltd / Nando’s Holdings (UK) Ltd | UK operating entities | UK legal vehicles | No SPIRE export licences identified 10 |
| Israeli Ministry of Defence / IDF | Israeli state security | Potential counterparty | No relationship identified 11 |
| SIBAT (Defence Export Directorate) | Israeli regulatory body | Procurement registry | Nando’s absent 12 |
| Elbit Systems / IAI / Rafael / IMI | Israeli defence primes | Potential supply-chain counterparties | No relationship identified 18 |
| Who Profits Research Centre | Civil society database | Monitoring organisation | Nando’s absent (training data; live query recommended) 11 |
| AFSC “Investigate” | Civil society database | Monitoring organisation | Nando’s absent 18 |
| Amnesty International / Human Rights Watch | NGOs | Investigators | No Nando’s-specific military report identified 16 17 |
| UK SPIRE system | Export control registry | Export licensing | No Nando’s entries identifiable (aggregated data) 14 |
| NCACC (South Africa) | Export control body | Export licensing | Records not comprehensively public 15 |
| BDS Movement | Civil society campaign | Boycott campaigns | No military-specific Nando’s campaign identified 19 |
The V-DIG domain assessment returns a zero score across all sub-categories. The finding is grounded in the structural characteristics of Nando’s as a business — a food-service operator with no technology product lines, no software development function, and no defence or intelligence sector contracting activity — combined with affirmative null findings across every relevant evidence class.
On enterprise technology stack and Israeli-origin vendor relationships, the publicly identifiable components of Nando’s technology infrastructure are limited to what is visible through front-end web analytics profiling and named data processor disclosures. Nando’s web properties deploy Google Tag Manager, Google Analytics, Facebook Pixel, and Hotjar.20 Named data processors in the UK privacy policy are Salesforce (CRM and loyalty platform), Google (analytics and cloud services), and Braze (customer engagement platform).21 None of these vendors are of Israeli origin. A systematic check against the public customer reference pages of major Israeli-origin enterprise software vendors — including Check Point Software, Wiz, SentinelOne, CyberArk, NICE Ltd, Verint Systems, and Claroty — identified no instance of Nando’s appearing as a named or referenced customer.22 23 24 25 26 27
On surveillance, biometrics, and retail technology, no evidence has been identified of Nando’s deploying facial recognition, biometric identification, behavioural analytics, or gait analysis technology of Israeli origin. Key Israeli-origin vendors in this space — AnyVision/Oosto, BriefCam, and Trax Retail — were checked against their public customer reference pages and case study libraries; none list Nando’s.28 29 30 Nando’s has not been named in any trade press article, NGO report, parliamentary record, or investigative journalism piece in connection with in-store surveillance or biometric deployment.
On cloud infrastructure and data residency, no evidence of Nando’s operating, leasing, or co-locating data centre or cloud infrastructure within Israel has been identified. Project Nimbus — the Israeli government’s national cloud infrastructure programme, publicly contracted with Google Cloud and Amazon Web Services — has no identified Nando’s participation as a provider, subcontractor, or infrastructure tenant.31 Cloud services identified in Nando’s public disclosures (Google, Salesforce, Braze) are US-headquartered; no Israeli sovereign cloud participation by any of these vendors on Nando’s behalf has been documented.21
On defence, intelligence, and security sector technology relationships, the category is structurally inapplicable. Nando’s has no known defence, intelligence, or security sector technology contracting activity in any jurisdiction.9 32 No public disclosure, NGO report, investigative article, or parliamentary record reviewed in training data associates Nando’s with defence or intelligence sector procurement, either as a supplier or as an entity embedding defence-derived technology into its operations. Offensive cyber and lethal autonomous systems categories are equally inapplicable: Nando’s has no software development, product engineering, or technology licensing function.
On AI, algorithmic, and autonomous systems, no evidence has been identified of AI or machine learning product lines, provision of AI systems to any state body, or use of training data drawn from surveillance or intercepted communications in Israel or the occupied territories. Nando’s loyalty programme and app generate consumer behavioural data, but no evidence of that data being shared with or licensed to Israeli AI or data analytics ventures has been identified in any public source.21 33 Autonomous systems and lethal applications are outside scope for a restaurant operator.
On technology ecosystem and R&D footprint, no Israeli R&D centres, software engineering offices, innovation laboratories, or technology accelerator programmes have been identified. Nando’s Israel (nandos.co.il) is a restaurant franchise operation; no technology or R&D function has been attributed to it in any public source, and it does not appear in any Israeli technology sector registry or innovation authority record.34 No Israeli technology acquisitions or investments, and no patent or IP co-development arrangements with Israeli-domiciled institutions such as the Technion or Hebrew University, have been identified.
The principal challenge to the nil V-DIG score is the incompleteness of visibility into Nando’s back-end technology stack. As a private company, Nando’s does not publish a formal technology vendor list, and its point-of-sale and restaurant management systems are not publicly documented. Global POS vendors such as Oracle MICROS maintain Israeli development offices, but whether Nando’s uses any such system cannot be confirmed or excluded.35 If a back-end POS or operations management system deployed by Nando’s incorporated Israeli-developed components, this would be invisible in public sources. This represents a genuine evidence gap.
Similarly, managed security service provider relationships for Nando’s have not been publicly named. Any embedded deployment of Israeli-origin surveillance or analytics technology via a bundled or white-labelled MSP service would be unlikely to surface in public disclosures given Nando’s private status. No such relationship has been positively identified, but it cannot be ruled out from available sources alone.
For the V-DIG score to move above zero, the rubric requires affirmative evidence that Nando’s is providing technology to Israel (Band 4+) or using Israeli-origin enterprise software (Band 3.1–3.9). Even the latter — the lowest available non-zero band — would require a confirmed Israeli-origin vendor relationship that has not been identified in any public source. The null findings are consistent and cross-corroborated; the directionality of Nando’s commercial profile (food service, no tech development) strongly supports the nil conclusion.
A third limitation is the franchise technology and data flow question: Nando’s franchise agreements governing technology standards for Israeli franchisees — including data routing and storage locations — are not publicly available. Whether the Agamim Group’s restaurant operations use any Israeli-origin technology at a local level is undocumented, and any such local deployment would not constitute Nando’s Group Holdings providing technology to Israeli state or security entities.
| Entity | Type | Relevance | Finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nando’s Group Holdings Ltd | Parent company | Subject of audit | No Israeli-origin digital relationships identified |
| Chickenland Ltd | UK operating entity | UK legal vehicle | UK privacy policy reviewed 21 |
| Salesforce | US technology vendor | Named UK data processor | US-headquartered; no Israeli origin 21 |
| Braze | US technology vendor | Named UK data processor | US-headquartered; no Israeli origin 21 |
| US technology vendor | Analytics, cloud services | US-headquartered; no Israeli origin 21 | |
| Check Point Software | Israeli-origin vendor | Enterprise security | No Nando’s customer reference identified 22 |
| Wiz | Israeli-origin vendor | Cloud security | No Nando’s customer reference identified 23 |
| SentinelOne | Israeli-origin vendor | Endpoint security | No Nando’s customer reference identified 24 |
| CyberArk | Israeli-origin vendor | Identity security | No Nando’s customer reference identified 25 |
| NICE Ltd | Israeli-origin vendor | Analytics/workforce | No Nando’s customer reference identified 26 |
| Verint Systems | Israeli-origin vendor | Analytics/intelligence | No Nando’s customer reference identified 27 |
| AnyVision/Oosto | Israeli-origin vendor | Facial recognition/retail | No Nando’s customer reference identified 28 |
| BriefCam | Israeli-origin vendor | Video analytics | No Nando’s customer reference identified 29 |
| Trax Retail | Israeli-origin vendor | Computer vision/retail | No Nando’s customer reference identified 30 |
| Oracle MICROS | POS vendor (Israeli dev offices) | Restaurant POS | Nando’s use unconfirmed; evidence gap 35 |
| Project Nimbus | Israeli government cloud programme | Cloud infrastructure | Nando’s not identified as participant 31 |
| Who Profits Research Centre | Civil society database | Monitoring | Nando’s absent 11 |
| UN OHCHR (A/HRC/43/71) | UN human rights body | Settlement business database | Nando’s absent 36 |
| Nando’s Israel (nandos.co.il) | Israeli franchise | Local restaurant operation | Food-retail presence only; no tech/R&D function 34 |
| UK ICO | Data protection regulator | Enforcement | No action against Nando’s identified |
The V-ECON domain scores 1.13, driven entirely by the historical and possibly ongoing direct franchise licensing relationship between Nando’s Group Holdings and the Agamim Group, its Israeli franchise operator. Every other V-ECON sub-category — product sourcing, capital investment, beneficial ownership, operational presence beyond the franchise, and profit flows — returns null findings after comprehensive inquiry. Understanding the score requires understanding both the positive finding (the franchise relationship) and the strength of the null findings across adjacent categories.
On supply chain and sourcing, Nando’s brand identity is architecturally tied to PERi-PERi (African Bird’s Eye Chilli), publicly sourced from Mozambique and South Africa.37 38 No Israeli agricultural origin appears in any public Nando’s sourcing communication, ingredient disclosure, or sustainability report. UK-facing food provenance materials identify free-range chicken (UK-sourced), potatoes, and salad items under country-of-origin disclosures pointing to the UK, South Africa, and generic European origins — no Israeli-origin category appears anywhere.39 38 No verified commercial relationship between Nando’s and Israeli agricultural suppliers — including Mehadrin, Hadiklaim, or any successor to the Agrexco state-linked exporter (which entered insolvency in 2011 and ceased trading) — has been identified in corporate filings, NGO databases, trade press, or regulatory records.40 41 42 The Who Profits Research Centre and Corporate Occupation databases do not list Nando’s in connection with any Israeli agricultural or food-processing supplier.43 44
On product origin, labelling, and settlement-origin goods, no public reports, NGO investigations, regulatory citations, or DEFRA/customs audit findings implicating Nando’s in the procurement or retail sale of goods from West Bank settlements, the Jordan Valley, or the Golan Heights have been identified.43 44 The 2021 joint investigation by Corporate Occupation and War on Want into settlement produce in UK supply chains did not identify Nando’s as a company of concern.44 45 No DEFRA enforcement action or customs citation involving Nando’s and settlement-produce labelling has been identified.46 47
On capital investment and financial exposure, no direct capital investment by Nando’s within Israel or the occupied territories — including acquisitions, manufacturing facilities, logistics hubs, data centres, or real estate — has been identified in corporate filings or investment databases.48 10 Nando’s Group Holdings is privately held; the Enthoven family and Brozin family are South African-domiciled private interests with no confirmed Israel-specific investment mandate.1 No Israeli private equity sponsor, Israeli state investment fund, or Israeli institutional investor has been identified as a parent or beneficial owner. No Israeli-domiciled controlling party appears on any Companies House PSC register.10 No Israeli sovereign bonds or Israel-focused investment funds appear in any Nando’s corporate filing or press record.
On operational presence, Israel does not appear in Nando’s published market lists or restaurant locators.49 No offices, sales operations, support centres, warehouses, or company-operated restaurant locations within Israel or the occupied territories have been identified. This is consistent with the franchise model, under which the Agamim Group bears operational responsibility for Israeli restaurant locations.
The franchise relationship itself is the only source of non-zero V-ECON scoring. The Agamim Group operated branded Nando’s restaurants in Israel from approximately 2013–2015 onwards under a direct franchise licence from Nando’s Group Holdings.2 Under this arrangement, Nando’s receives royalty and franchise fee revenue extracted from the Israeli commercial economy — classified under the rubric as “Sustained Trade” (Impact Band 3.1–3.9). The franchise model places day-to-day operational responsibility with the Agamim Group; Nando’s Group Holdings is not identified as actively managing Israeli restaurant operations. This structure justifies a Proximity score at the upper end of Band 5.1–6.0 (direct contractual relationship with an independent franchisee, not active management). Duration — multi-year, from approximately 2013 through at least 2022 — supports a Magnitude score anchored at Band 4.0–5.0, reflecting modest but sustained scale. Israel is a minor market relative to Nando’s 30+ country global footprint, and no disclosed revenue figure for the Israeli franchise has been identified.
The most material uncertainty in V-ECON is the current operational status of the Israeli franchise. Training-data coverage indicates possible contraction or partial closure of the Agamim Group network, but no official corporate confirmation of full exit, wind-down, or continuation has been identified.2 If the Agamim Group franchise is confirmed fully exited and the franchise agreement terminated, the Impact score would approach zero and the V-ECON domain score would fall sharply — potentially to nil. Conversely, confirmed continuation at the previously observed scale would maintain the current score. The 2026 BDS-1000 score reflects this uncertainty by anchoring Impact conservatively within the lower half of Band 3.1–3.9.
A second limitation concerns the territorial scope of the Agamim Group franchise licence. No confirmed evidence of Nando’s franchise outlets inside West Bank settlements has been identified, but the specific geographic boundary definitions in the Agamim Group licence are not publicly available. The audit therefore cannot confirm or exclude the presence of settlement-located outlets. Were settlement presence confirmed, V-ECON Impact would be elevated within the scoring band, and cross-domain implications for V-POL would arise.
Third, Nando’s Group Holdings does not publish consolidated group-level financial statements. This limits visibility into global subsidiary structures, portfolio holdings, and inter-company financial arrangements that would otherwise be verifiable through public-company disclosures. The full distribution chain for Nando’s branded retail products in Israeli supermarkets — and whether any institutional volume purchaser includes Israeli military catering units — could not be determined from available public records, though no positive evidence of such a relationship has been identified.
| Entity | Type | Relevance | Finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nando’s Group Holdings Ltd | Parent company | Subject of audit | South African private company; no Israeli beneficial owner 1 |
| Agamim Group | Israeli franchise partner | Direct contractual counterparty | Operated Israeli Nando’s franchise from c. 2013–2015 onwards; current status unclear 2 |
| Entsha Investment Holdings / Enthoven family | Principal shareholder | Beneficial ownership | South African-domiciled; no confirmed Israel-specific mandate 1 |
| Robert Brozin | Co-founder | Beneficial ownership | South African private interests; no Israeli investment identified 1 |
| Nando’s Holdings (UK) Ltd | UK operating entity | UK legal vehicle | No Israeli subsidiary or branch 10 |
| Agrexco | Israeli state-linked agricultural exporter | Potential supply counterparty | Entered insolvency 2011; ceased trading; no successor Nando’s link 40 |
| Mehadrin | Israeli agricultural exporter | Potential supply counterparty | No Nando’s relationship identified 41 |
| Hadiklaim | Israeli agricultural exporter | Potential supply counterparty | No Nando’s relationship identified 42 |
| Who Profits Research Centre | Civil society database | Monitoring | Nando’s absent 43 |
| Corporate Occupation | Civil society database | Monitoring | Nando’s absent 44 |
| War on Want | NGO | 2021 settlement-produce investigation | Nando’s not identified as concern 45 |
| DEFRA | UK regulatory body | Food labelling and sourcing | No enforcement action against Nando’s 46 |
| FCDO/DEFRA | UK government guidance | Overseas business risk | Nando’s not referenced 47 |
| South African CIPC | Corporate registry | Beneficial ownership | No Israel-directed arrangement identified 50 |
The V-POL domain scores 1.50, making it the primary driver of Nando’s non-zero BDS-1000 composite score. The scoring rests on two analytically distinct findings: first, the historical (and possibly ongoing) treatment of Israel as a standard commercial franchise market with no geopolitical acknowledgment; and second, a corporate communications posture of sustained public silence on the Israel-Palestine conflict, assessed against a well-documented prior history of political and social commentary in Nando’s advertising.
Nando’s has not issued any identified corporate statement explicitly addressing the Israel-Palestine conflict, before or after October 7, 2023.8 3 Searches across Nando’s UK, South Africa, and global social media accounts and press release archives find no formal open letter, press release, or public declaration taking any position on the conflict or the humanitarian situation in Gaza.8 3 In October and November 2023, Nando’s UK social media activity remained focused on product and lifestyle content with no commentary on the conflict.8 This is not unusual in isolation — a broad pattern of corporate silence characterised many UK and South African restaurant chains during the same period.6 7
What distinguishes Nando’s silence, and what produces the I-POL score within Band 3.1–4.0 rather than a lower band, is the documented contrast with its prior brand behaviour. Nando’s, particularly through South African advertising, has historically engaged with political and social satire at a level unusual for a restaurant chain — including campaigns referencing apartheid legacies, African political leadership figures, and racial reconciliation themes.1 In 2020, Nando’s South Africa issued advertising aligned with global Black Lives Matter protests, affirming an anti-racism brand stance.3 The existence of this established pattern of domestic political commentary means that the absence of any equivalent engagement with the Gaza conflict is a deliberate communications choice, not a reflection of a brand that is constitutionally apolitical. This dimension is scored as an element of “Business-as-Usual / Selective Silence” at the lower end of Band 3.1–4.0, with acknowledged uncertainty about whether it crosses into “Double Standard” territory at Band 2.1–3.0.
On the Israeli franchise, training data confirms that Nando’s operated a franchise network in Israel through the Agamim Group, with branded restaurants active in Israeli cities from approximately 2013–2015 onwards.2 Corporate materials describing this relationship use standard market-expansion commercial language, with no identified geopolitical partnership framing or unique language associated with the Israeli market.3 9 This treatment — commercial normalisation of a politically contested market — is characteristic of Band 3.1–4.0 Business-as-Usual scoring: the franchise is treated as a routine commercial relationship rather than as raising any distinctive governance or ethical consideration. The current operational status of the Israeli franchise is unclear; possible contraction has been noted but no confirmed corporate exit has been identified.2
On the question of whether any franchise outlet operated inside West Bank settlements, training data does not confirm the presence of Nando’s branded outlets inside Israeli settlements. However, the specific geographic boundary definitions of the Agamim Group licence are not publicly available, and this represents a material evidence gap. No UN OHCHR settlement database entry for Nando’s has been identified.51
On lobbying, advocacy, and financial contributions, the audit returns null findings across all sub-categories. No Nando’s-specific entries appear in the UK Parliament lobbying register related to Israel-Palestine policy or BDS legislation.52 No Nando’s entries appear in US OpenSecrets lobbying or PAC donation databases.53 No evidence of corporate donations to parastatal Israeli organisations, settlement advocacy groups, or military-welfare funds — including Friends of the Israel Defense Forces or the Jewish National Fund — has been identified.54 No evidence of state honours from Israel, participation in “Brand Israel” public diplomacy, or formal partnerships with Israeli state academic institutions has been identified.54 No evidence of Nando’s directing logistics capacity, free product, or other corporate assets to Israeli state or state-aligned NGO efforts during the conflict period has been identified.7 55
The V-POL Proximity score of 8.50 reflects that the political posture — including the communications silence — is a direct corporate decision made by Nando’s Group Holdings itself, not mediated through any subsidiary, partner, or intermediary. The company is the direct actor for its own communications choices. Under the rubric, this anchors Proximity firmly in Band 8.3–8.9 (Controller).
The most significant analytical challenge to the V-POL score is the “double standard versus business-as-usual” boundary question. The audit identifies a tension: Nando’s has a documented history of social and political commentary in its South African advertising, including Black Lives Matter-aligned messaging in 2020. The absence of equivalent engagement with the Gaza conflict could be scored as a selective double standard (Band 2.1–3.0, which would reduce I-POL and therefore V-POL) or as standard business-as-usual silence (Band 3.1–4.0). The difference between an I score of 2.8 (double standard) and 3.5 (business-as-usual) would shift V-POL from approximately 1.19 to 1.50 and the composite BRS from approximately 117 to 130. This distinction does not alter the Tier E classification; it affects only the precise score within the tier.
The case for a double-standard classification rests on the documented asymmetry in Nando’s political engagement: it has commented on South African politics but not on the Gaza conflict. The case against it rests on the possibility that Nando’s post-2020 brand strategy may have evolved toward political neutrality, that domestic South African politics occupies a distinctive place in the brand’s identity that does not extend to international conflicts, and that the absence of commentary on Gaza is consistent with a broadly apolitical stance toward non-South-African geopolitical matters. The audit resolves this ambiguity in favour of the slightly higher Band 3.1–4.0 scoring on grounds that the business-as-usual framing is better supported by the totality of evidence, while acknowledging the double-standard argument is not without merit.
A second challenge concerns the current status of the Israeli franchise. If the Agamim Group network has been wound down or the franchise agreement terminated, the political significance of the Israeli commercial relationship is diminished retroactively, though the communications posture during the conflict period remains a scored factor. A confirmed exit would not eliminate the V-POL score but would reduce its factual underpinning.
Third, the unverified flag-emoji claim — that Nando’s briefly included an Israeli flag in a promotional digital campaign before removing it — has been excluded from scoring because it has not been confirmed by any named major publication.8 If this claim were confirmed, it would constitute evidence of brand positioning choices in a sensitive context and could affect I-POL scoring upward. Its exclusion is the correct forensic approach given the current evidence basis.
The Brozin and Enthoven findings on personal philanthropic and advocacy activities carry moderate confidence given limited biographical financial data and incomplete public philanthropic disclosure records.1 54 No positive evidence of advocacy financing directed toward Israeli state-aligned organisations has been identified for either figure, but this reflects the limits of available disclosure rather than a fully verified negative.
| Entity | Type | Relevance | Finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nando’s Group Holdings Ltd | Parent company | Subject of audit; direct actor for communications | No public statement on conflict identified 8 |
| Agamim Group | Israeli franchise partner | Operational presence vector | Franchise active from c. 2013–2015; current status unclear 2 |
| Robert Brozin | Co-founder | Principal figure | No public conflict statements or advocacy financing identified 1 |
| Dick Enthoven / Entsha Investment Holdings | Principal shareholder | Beneficial ownership/governance | South African philanthropic focus; no Israeli advocacy financing identified 1 |
| Fernando Duarte | Co-founder | Corporate history | No relevant findings |
| BDS South Africa | Civil society campaign | Boycott monitoring | No dedicated Nando’s-specific campaign identified 56 |
| BDS Movement (international) | Civil society campaign | Boycott monitoring | No military-specific Nando’s campaign identified 19 |
| Palestine Solidarity Campaign UK | Civil society | Boycott monitoring | No named NGO-led Nando’s campaign identified 7 |
| Friends of the Israel Defense Forces (FIDF) | Israeli military-welfare fund | Potential donation recipient | No Nando’s donation identified 54 |
| Jewish National Fund (JNF) | Israeli parastatal organisation | Potential donation recipient | No Nando’s donation identified 54 |
| Brand Israel Group | Israeli public diplomacy | Potential partnership | No Nando’s participation identified 54 |
| UK Parliament lobbying register | UK regulatory body | Lobbying record | No Nando’s entries on Israel-related matters 52 |
| OpenSecrets (US) | US campaign finance database | Lobbying/PAC record | No Nando’s entries identified 53 |
| UN OHCHR (settlement database) | UN human rights body | Settlement business list | Nando’s absent 51 |
| South African Jewish Report | Media | Executive/corporate coverage | No advocacy financing identified 54 |
Across all four domains, the most pervasive structural limitation is Nando’s status as a private company. Private ownership means no consolidated group financial statements, no public procurement disclosures, no mandatory vendor list publications, and no investor relations materials that would surface subsidiary structures, technology relationships, or supply chain details at the granularity available for publicly listed entities. The aggregate effect is that multiple genuine evidence gaps — back-end POS systems, franchise technology standards, Israeli franchisee local commercial relationships, group-level portfolio holdings, and beneficial ownership at depth — cannot be resolved from public sources.
A second cross-domain limitation is the unavailability of live web search at the time of audit compilation. All four audits rely on training-data coverage through April 2026. Databases that require live querying — including Who Profits, the UN OHCHR settlement business database, and the AFSC “Investigate” platform — could not be confirmed as of the audit date. The training-data assessments of Nando’s absence from these databases are the best available evidence but should be verified by live query before final reliance.11 43 51
The current operational status of the Agamim Group Israeli franchise is the single most consequential open question. Resolution of this question — confirmed full exit or confirmed continuation — would materially affect V-ECON (potentially to near-zero on exit) and the framing of V-POL, and would shift the composite BRS while leaving the Tier E classification intact. This should be the primary target of any follow-up verification.
The unverified flag-emoji claim (social media, late 2023) should be investigated through named publication verification. If confirmed, it would constitute evidence relevant to V-POL I-scoring. Its current exclusion from scoring is the correct forensic approach; it is not a finding, positive or negative.
| Entity | Type | Domain(s) | Key Finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nando’s Group Holdings Ltd | Parent company (South African private) | All | Subject of audit; South African private company; no Israeli beneficial owner |
| Nando’s International Holdings | Operating entity | All | Global franchise and operations vehicle |
| Chickenland Ltd | UK operating entity | V-MIL, V-DIG, V-ECON | UK restaurant operations; no Israeli relationships identified 10 |
| Nando’s Holdings (UK) Ltd | UK holding entity | V-MIL, V-ECON | UK legal vehicle; no Israeli subsidiary 10 |
| Agamim Group | Israeli franchise partner | V-ECON, V-POL | Direct franchise counterparty c. 2013–2015 onwards; current status unclear 2 |
| Robert Brozin | Co-founder | V-ECON, V-POL | Departed active role c. 2011; no Israeli advocacy or investment identified 1 |
| Fernando Duarte | Co-founder | V-ECON | No relevant findings |
| Dick Enthoven / Entsha Investment Holdings | Principal shareholder | V-ECON, V-POL | South African private interests; no Israeli advocacy financing identified 1 |
| Salesforce | US data processor | V-DIG | Named in UK privacy policy; US-headquartered 21 |
| Braze | US data processor | V-DIG | Named in UK privacy policy; US-headquartered 21 |
| US technology vendor | V-DIG | Analytics, cloud; US-headquartered 21 | |
| SIBAT | Israeli Defence Export Directorate | V-MIL | Nando’s absent 12 |
| Who Profits Research Centre | Civil society database | V-MIL, V-ECON | Nando’s absent (training data) 11 43 |
| AFSC “Investigate” | Civil society database | V-MIL | Nando’s absent 18 |
| UN OHCHR (A/HRC/43/71) | UN settlement database | V-DIG, V-POL | Nando’s absent 51 |
| Corporate Occupation | Civil society database | V-ECON | Nando’s absent 44 |
| BDS South Africa | Civil society campaign | V-MIL, V-POL | No dedicated Nando’s campaign identified 56 |
| BDS Movement (international) | Civil society campaign | V-MIL, V-POL | No military-specific campaign; general campaign literature only 19 |
| Palestine Solidarity Campaign UK | Civil society | V-POL | No named NGO-led Nando’s campaign identified 7 |
| Agrexco | Israeli state-linked exporter (defunct) | V-ECON | Entered insolvency 2011; no Nando’s successor link 40 |
| FIDF / JNF | Israeli parastatal/military-welfare | V-POL | No Nando’s donations identified 54 |
| DEFRA | UK regulatory body | V-ECON | No labelling enforcement against Nando’s 46 |
| UK SPIRE system | Export control registry | V-MIL | Aggregated data; Nando’s not individually traceable 14 |
| NCACC (South Africa) | Export control body | V-MIL | Records not comprehensively public 15 |
| Domain | I | M | P | V-Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| V-MIL | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| V-DIG | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| V-ECON | 3.20 | 4.50 | 5.50 | 1.13 |
| V-POL | 3.50 | 3.50 | 8.50 | 1.50 |
Composite BRS: 130 — Tier E (0–199)
V-POL is the highest domain score (V_MAX = 1.75 before rounding) and is the primary composite driver. V-ECON contributes a discounted secondary weight (Sum_OTHERS × 0.2 = 0.324). V-MIL and V-DIG contribute zero.
The V-ECON score reflects a historical direct franchise licensing relationship (Agamim Group) scored as Sustained Trade at modest scale and direct-contract proximity. The I score of 3.20 sits conservatively within Band 3.1–3.9, with uncertainty anchored around the unresolved franchise continuation question. The P score of 5.50 reflects the direct franchise contract structure without active management by Nando’s.
The V-POL score reflects business-as-usual treatment of the Israeli franchise as a standard commercial market and sustained corporate silence on the conflict, scored against a documented prior history of political engagement in South African advertising. The P score of 8.50 reflects that communications posture decisions are made directly by Nando’s Group Holdings with no intermediary. The I score of 3.50 sits at the lower end of Band 3.1–4.0; the distance to Band 2.1–3.0 (double-standard scoring) is a genuine analytical ambiguity but does not alter the Tier classification.
High confidence findings:
– V-MIL and V-DIG nil scores are robustly supported. Nando’s corporate profile (food-service, no manufacturing, no tech development) is structurally incompatible with non-zero scoring in these domains on the available evidence. Evidence gaps are structural public-data limitations, not suppressed positives.
– V-POL Proximity (8.50) is high-confidence: the communications posture is a direct corporate decision with no intermediary.
– Beneficial ownership is South African-private; no Israeli-domiciled controlling party identified.
Moderate confidence findings:
– V-ECON score (1.13): the Agamim Group franchise relationship is confirmed for the historical period; current operational status is the primary uncertainty. A confirmed full exit would reduce V-ECON substantially.
– V-POL Impact (3.50): the Band 3.1–4.0 placement versus Band 2.1–3.0 is a judgment call within a narrow range. The difference shifts BRS from approximately 130 to approximately 117 — Tier E in both cases.
Primary open questions for live verification:
1. Current operational status of the Agamim Group Israeli franchise network — the single highest-priority verification target.
2. Specific geographic scope of the Agamim Group franchise licence (settlement boundary question).
3. Live Who Profits database query for Nando’s — training-data absence should be confirmed via direct query.11
4. Live UN OHCHR settlement database query for Nando’s.51
5. Whether the flag-emoji social media claim has been reported by any named publication since April 2026.8
6. Brozin post-2011 and Enthoven family philanthropic activities — full disclosure not publicly available.
7. Back-end POS and restaurant management systems vendor identification — genuine V-DIG gap.
The composite BRS of 130 (Tier E) reflects a company with no identified military or digital technology involvement, a modest and historically bounded economic relationship with Israel through a franchise model, and a political posture of commercial normalisation and selective silence. Recommended actions should be calibrated to these findings and the material uncertainties.
For researchers and due-diligence practitioners: The highest-priority verification step before relying on any aspect of this dossier is live querying of the Who Profits Research Centre database,11 the UN OHCHR settlement database,51 and the AFSC “Investigate” platform18 specifically for Nando’s. The current operational status of the Agamim Group franchise — and whether any outlets were located inside West Bank settlements — should be confirmed through Israeli business press (Globes English edition).2 These steps address the two most consequential open questions in the audit.
For institutional investors and pension trustees: The Tier E score indicates a low-concern profile under the BDS-1000 framework on currently available evidence. The primary basis for continued monitoring — rather than immediate action — is the unresolved franchise status. If the Agamim Group franchise is confirmed fully exited, the V-ECON score would decline toward nil and the composite BRS would fall further within Tier E. No divestment trigger is activated by the current evidence base. Standard franchise sector diligence on territorial scope of licence agreements and sub-tier catering contracts at IDF facilities is recommended where fiduciary standards require it.
For consumer advocacy and civil society organisations: The documented contrast between Nando’s South African political engagement history and its silence on the Gaza conflict is the strongest factual basis for reputational engagement with the company. Any campaign communication should accurately characterise the finding as a V-POL selective-silence concern scored conservatively within Band 3.1–4.0, and should not rely on the unverified flag-emoji claim or assert confirmed settlement presence without further verification. Claims of military supply involvement are unsupported by the available evidence and should not be made.
For Nando’s Group Holdings (corporate governance): The open question of territorial scope in the Agamim Group franchise licence — whether any outlet operated within internationally recognised occupied territories — creates reputational uncertainty that could be resolved through a public disclosure of the geographic scope of the franchise agreement or through a formal corporate statement on current Israel operational status. The V-POL finding does not require any specific corporate action, but companies with Nando’s documented history of political commentary bear a higher reputational cost from selective silence than structurally apolitical brands.
BBC News — Nando’s business profile — https://www.bbc.com/news/business-34424113 ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
Globes English — Israeli business press — https://en.globes.co.il/en/article-1001147065 ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
Nando’s sustainability and corporate materials — https://www.nandos.com/sustainability ↩↩↩↩↩
Nando’s UK Modern Slavery Statement — https://www.nandos.co.uk/modern-slavery-statement ↩
UN OHCHR — HRC session 43 list of reports — https://www.ohchr.org/en/hr-bodies/hrc/regular-sessions/session43/list-of-reports ↩
The Guardian — boycott brands Israel-Gaza UK — https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/nov/10/boycott-brands-israel-gaza-uk ↩↩
Reuters — brands facing boycotts Israel-Gaza war — https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/brands-facing-boycotts-israel-gaza-war-2023-10-23/ ↩↩↩↩↩
Nando’s about/our story — https://www.nandos.com/about/our-story ↩↩↩
Companies House — Nando’s Holdings (UK) Ltd — https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/02206631 ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
Who Profits Research Centre — company database — https://whoprofits.org/companies/ ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
SIBAT — Israel Defence Export Directorate — https://sibat.mod.gov.il/en/Pages/default.aspx ↩↩↩↩
Nando’s UK — about us / product information — https://www.nandos.co.uk/about-us ↩
UK Government — strategic export controls licensing data — https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/strategic-export-controls-licensing-data ↩↩↩↩
South African Government — NCACC — https://www.gov.za/about-sa/national-conventional-arms-control-committee ↩↩↩↩
Amnesty International — Israel apartheid campaign — https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/campaigns/2022/02/israels-system-of-apartheid/ ↩↩↩
Human Rights Watch — threshold crossed report — https://www.hrw.org/report/2021/04/27/threshold-crossed/israeli-authorities-and-crimes-apartheid-and-persecution ↩↩↩
AFSC — Investigate platform — https://www.afsc.org/investigate ↩↩↩↩↩↩
BDS Movement — what to boycott — https://www.bdsmovement.net/get-involved/what-to-boycott ↩↩↩
BuiltWith — Nando’s technology profile — https://builtwith.com/nandos.com ↩
Nando’s UK privacy policy — https://www.nandos.co.uk/privacy-policy ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
Check Point Software — customer references — https://www.checkpoint.com/customers/ ↩↩
SentinelOne — customer references — https://www.sentinelone.com/customers/ ↩↩
CyberArk — customer references — https://www.cyberark.com/customers/ ↩↩
NICE Ltd — case studies — https://www.nice.com/resources/case-studies ↩↩
Verint Systems — case studies — https://www.verint.com/resources/case-studies/ ↩↩
Oosto (AnyVision) — customer references — https://oosto.com/customers/ ↩↩
BriefCam — resources — https://www.briefcam.com/resources/ ↩↩
Trax Retail — customer references — https://traxretail.com/customers/ ↩↩
Google Cloud — customer references — https://cloud.google.com/customers ↩↩
Nando’s impact page — https://www.nandos.com/impact ↩
Google Play Store — Nando’s UK app — https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.nandos.android.uk ↩
Oracle — food and beverage industry — https://www.oracle.com/industries/food-beverage/ ↩↩
UN OHCHR — HRC session 43 list of reports — https://www.ohchr.org/en/hr-bodies/hrc/regular-sessions/session43/list-of-reports ↩
Nando’s — peri-peri sourcing — https://www.nandos.com/food/peri-peri ↩
Nando’s UK — our ingredients — https://www.nandos.co.uk/food/our-ingredients ↩↩
Nando’s UK — our chicken — https://www.nandos.co.uk/food/our-chicken ↩
Wikipedia — Agrexco — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agrexco ↩↩↩
Who Profits Research Centre — company search — https://www.whoprofits.org/companies/search ↩↩↩↩↩
Corporate Occupation — companies — https://www.corporateoccupation.com/companies ↩↩↩↩↩
War on Want — resources — https://www.waronwant.org/resources ↩↩
UK Government — food labelling guidance — https://www.gov.uk/guidance/labelling-of-food-for-retail-sale ↩↩↩
UK Government — overseas business risk Israel and OPT — https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/overseas-business-risk-israel-and-the-occupied-palestinian-territories ↩↩
Companies House — Nando’s Holdings (UK) Ltd filing history — https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/02206631/filing-history ↩
Nando’s — restaurant locator — https://www.nandos.com/find-a-nandos ↩
South African CIPC — eServices — https://eservices.cipc.co.za/ ↩
UN OHCHR — HRC session 43 list of reports (settlement database) — https://www.ohchr.org/en/hr-bodies/hrc/regular-sessions/session43/list-of-reports ↩↩↩↩↩↩
UK Parliament — lobbying register — https://www.parliament.uk/mps-lords-and-offices/standards-and-financial-interests/lobbying/ ↩↩
OpenSecrets — Nando’s summary — https://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/nandos/summary ↩↩
South African Jewish Report — https://www.sajr.co.za ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
Al Jazeera — boycotts and businesses caught in the middle — https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2023/11/6/boycotts-and-the-businesses-caught-in-the-middle ↩
BDS South Africa — campaigns — https://bdssouthafrica.com/campaigns ↩↩