Frontpage          About the committee          Support us          Contact us     








These homepages are sponsored by:



The Support Committee is member of:



The Support Committee is member of:




Norwatch: Norwegian investor blacklists fertilizer company
western_sahara_phosphate_harbour_510-200.jpg

The Norwegian investor KLP has today announced that they have kicked out the Australian firm Incitec Pivot from its funds. The company imports phosphate rock from Western Sahara, which is occupied by Morocco. Norwatch, 2 June 2009.
Published: 02.06 - 2009 16:30Printer version    
From the phosphate harbour in occupied Western Sahara, the minerals are shipped to fertilizer firms in Australia. Photo: www.wsrw.org

By Erik Hagen
Norwatch
2 June 2009

For the second time, KLP has thrown an Australian fertilizer firm out of its portfolios due to Western Sahara trade. The Western Sahara liberation movement Front Polisario congratulates KLP with its decision.

“KLP has made a right decision. It shows that their ethical and legal analysis of the phosphate industry in Western Sahara is done very thoroughly. We hope other investors will follow KLP’s example", Brahim Mokhtar, Polisario’s representative to the Nordic countries, told Norwatch.

Such trade is in violation of international law, since Morocco has no legal claims to Western Sahara, and henceforth, not to Western Sahara’s natural resources.

“Extraction of natural resources from occupied territories, particularly from Western Sahara, has been considered illegal by the UN’s under-secretary general for legal affairs in 2002”, Jeanett Bergan, head of Responsible Investments in KLP Kapitalforvaltning, wrote in a press release today.
Norwatch has previously written about Incitec Pivot’s phosphate imports from Western Sahara, which were carried out by the Oslo Stock Exchange registered shipping company Jinhui. When the Chinese-Norwegian shipping company was made aware of its transports, Jinhui decided to terminate further transports from Western Sahara. But Incitec maintained its imports through other shipping companies.

Also Incitec’s competitor Wesfarmers is from earlier blacklisted by KLP due to similar imports. Both Wesfarmers and Incitec Pivot have imported from Western Sahara during a number of years.

Even the Norwegian fertilizer giant Yara ended up being investigated by KLP in 2008, after Norwatch revealed that they too had imported from the same territory. KLP chose, however, not to exclude Yara from its funds, but placed the firm under a critical observation list. To the contrary of the Australian firms, which have long term delivery contracts for Western Sahara phosphates, Yara has assured that the imports in 2008 was a one time incident.

KLP manages over 200 billion kroners (approx. 23 billion euros) on behalf of more than 500.000 Norwegians.

Burma company out
In addition to Incitect Pivot, also the Chinese firm DongFeng has been excluded from KLP today. DongFeng was excluded by the Norwegian Government’s pension fund in March, after military deliveries to the regime in Burma.

Seven companies have now also been re-included in the KLP investment universe, after ethical improvement: Exxon Mobil, Grupo Ferrovial, Marathon Oil, Monsanto, Richemont, Thales og PetroChina.


 facebook    digg    reddit    del.icio.us    furl   

Top

News archive:
11.08 - 2009Talks to resume on breaking Western Sahara deadlock
09.08 - 2009Follow the Western Sahara conflict on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube
07.08 - 2009Amnesty reacts to Morocco travel restrictions
07.08 - 2009Kicked out of airport and forced home
06.08 - 2009Peace youth denied exit from Morocco
03.08 - 2009Informal talks to begin on 9 August in Vienna
03.08 - 2009Polisario: Moroccan autonomy plan is dead
31.07 - 2009President Abdelaziz' speech at IUSY festival
30.07 - 2009IUSY statement on Western Sahara
29.07 - 2009World Tribune: U.S. sees terror threat to Morocco
14.07 - 2009Norway doubles support to the Sahrawi people
12.07 - 2009Obama favor Polisario state
18.06 - 2009Norwegian photo blogger returned from refugee camps
02.07 - 2009Refugee Demonstration against Norwegian Fisheries
18.06 - 2009Follow the plundering on Twitter
02.06 - 2009Norwatch: Norwegian investor blacklists fertilizer company
18.05 - 2009Researcher in Trondheim with oil investigations in occupied territory
18.05 - 2009Support Committe demands "Norwegian" research stopped
11.05 - 2009South Trøndelag Labour Party Demands a Free Western Sahara
25.04 - 2009Senia vs. Phosphate plunder lawyers -Part 1






EN  NO EN ES FR

Since 1975, three quarters of the territory of Western Sahara has been occupied by Morocco. A majority of the population is still living in refugee camps in Algeria. Those who remained in their homeland are subjected to serious harassment from the Moroccan occupiers. For more than 40 years the Sahrawis have been waiting for the fullfilment of their legitimate right to self-determination.

Give a donation!
Support the Support Committee. Help us work for the Sahrawi people's struggle for self-determination. Give a donation here.

Order booklet on Western Sahara
28.03 - 2008

tn_nrc_hefte_510.jpg

A 20 page long booklet on the Western Sahara conflict has been published by the Norwegian Refugee Council. Order a hard copy version of the publication "Occupied Country, Displaced People" here.
Book on international law & Western Sahara
18.11 - 2007

tn_pedro_book_510.jpg

As far as we know it is the first collective work published in English dealing with the legal aspects of the Western Sahara problem. Order here.

News from Sahara Update
30.08.2010
DPA: Demonstrators arrested in Morocco to return to Spain
27.08.2010
Amnesty Int'l: Algeria and Morocco/Western Sahara: Show your commitm
22.08.2010
Guardian (UK): BHP Billiton urged to pull Potash Corp out of Western
07.07.2010
WSRW: Nordic parliamentarians call for halt of unethical EU fisherie
01.07.2010
WSRW: EU puts self-interest before peace in Western Sahara

Støttekomiteen for Vest-Sahara, , - :
Bank: 0532.16.31985 - Org.no: 987 378 352 -