Thursday, June 16, 2016
US Banks
Top Cluster Bomb Investment 'Hall of Shame': Report
Bank of America, JP Morgan among 74 of 158
financial institutions that invest in companies producing internationally
banned weapons
Cluster bombs operate by ejecting smaller
sub-munitions or "bomblets" that can saturate an area of several
football fields. (Photo: vaXzine/flickr/cc)
Despite the international ban on cluster
bombs, more than 150 financial institutions have invested $28 billion in
companies that produce them, according to a new report released Thursday.
Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, and Wells
Fargo are among the 158 banks, pension funds, and other firms listed in the
"Hall of Shame" compiled by the Netherlands-based organization PAX, a
member of the Cluster Munition Coalition (CMC).
The report, titled Worldwide
Investments in Cluster Munitions: A Shared Responsibility (pdf),
finds that the leading investors come from 14 countries including the U.S., the
UK, and Canada. Of the top 10 overall investors, the U.S. is home to eight.
Japan and China round out the last two.
Both the UK and Canada—along with France,
Germany, and Switzerland, whose institutions are also named on the list—have
signed the 2008 Oslo treaty known as the Convention on Cluster Munitions
banning the use of the indiscriminate bombs under international law.
The U.S., which hosts by far the most
companies on the list with 74, is not a signatory.
Cluster bombs, which can be launched from the
air or ground, operate by ejecting smaller sub-munitions or
"bomblets" that can saturate an area of several football fields,
according to CMC. They can remain volatile long after a conflict ends.
"Financial institutions must stop
turning a blind eye to the lethal consequences of their
investments," said CMC ambassador Branislav
Kapetanović, who survived a cluster bomb in Serbia 16 years ago. "Cluster
munitions are being used in Yemen and Syria, causing significant civilian
casualties including among children and women. All banks and financial
institutions must prohibit investment in companies that produce these
indiscriminate weapons."
One type of cluster bomb, produced by the U.S.-based
company Textron, has been used by the Saudi Arabia-led coalition in Yemen since
March 2015, the report states, citing research by Amnesty International and
Human Rights Watch.
Some of the countries listed in the report
have adopted legislation (pdf) that bans
certain forms of investment in cluster bombs, including Belgium, Ireland,
Italy, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Samoa, Spain,
and Switzerland. Others have "made an interpretive statement that
investments in cluster munitions are or can be seen as prohibited by the
Convention on Cluster Munitions."
But more needs to be done, PAX said, noting
that its recommendations "all come down to one simple message: disinvest
from producers of cluster munitions now!"
For financial firms, that means
ending any connection to cluster bomb manufacturers on every level—commercial
banking, investment banking, and asset management, the report states.
It continues: "Financial institutions
should develop policies that exclude all financial links with companies
involved in cluster munitions production. Because all investment facilitates
this production, no exceptions should be made for third-party financial
services, for funds that follow an index, or for civilian project financing for
a company also involved in cluster munitions."
Co-author Suzanne Oosterwijk said, "It
is an outrage that so many financial institutions have no qualms about
investing in companies that make banned cluster munitions," though she
noted that some companies have made proactive steps to end those links.
"We commend these financial institutions
for halting their investments and encourage others to follow suit," she
said.
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"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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