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Investors Against Genocide
Draw the line at investing in genocide

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Susan Morgan – 617-797-0451

BROAD INTERNATIONAL COALITION BACKS UNPRECEDENTED SHAREHOLDER ACTION
Religious and anti-genocide organizations support campaign for genocide-free investing

Boston, MA – March 13, 2008 – International, national, and regional religious and anti-genocide organizations have rallied behind an unprecedented shareholder proposal designed to ensure that mainstream mutual funds avoid investments that contribute to genocide.  Last week, the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee (UUSC); Physicians for Human Rights, American Jewish World Service (AJWS); Genocide Intervention Network, The ENOUGH Project, the Sudan Divestment Taskforce, The Aegis Trust and the Unitarian Universalist Association all signed on as official supporters of the proposal.  Additional supporters include the Massachusetts Coalition to Save Darfur, My Sister's Keeper, Americans Against the Darfur Genocide, Cooperative Metropolitan Ministries (CMM), Jews Against Genocide, and the New York City Coalition for Darfur.  More organizational supporters are expected to sign on in coming weeks and months as the campaign continues to gain momentum.

This broad coalition is encouraging shareholders to vote for a shareholder proposal that asks mutual funds to institute oversight procedures to screen out investments in companies that, in the judgment of the fund's Board, substantially contribute to genocide.  The proposal has been filed with 28 of Fidelity's mutual funds and dozens of funds from other companies including Barclays, Franklin Templeton, T. Rowe Price, and Vanguard.

"The Unitarian Universalist Association is voting for this resolution on behalf of our retirement plan participants invested in Fidelity funds and urging thousands of individual UU mutual fund investors to do the same," states Tim Brennan, Treasurer and Vice President of Finance at the Unitarian Universalist Association.  "We have the opportunity to use our financial assets to witness for the people of Sudan, and we believe it is our religious duty to do so."

Ruth Messinger of the American Jewish World Service is also a supporter of the shareholder proposal and her organization sent 30,000 of its members an email advising them of the upcoming vote.  "We believe that economic pressure is a critical strategy in bringing an end to the genocide in Darfur and to future genocides," states AJWS President Ruth W. Messinger.  "Passage of this shareholder proposal will be an important first step in ensuring that investments made by Americans in their trusted mutual funds will not support genocidal regimes."

Shareholder voting has begun in preparation for shareholder meetings on March 19 for twelve Fidelity funds.  More Fidelity funds will also vote on the genocide-free investing shareholder proposal at shareholder meetings scheduled for April 16 and May 14.  Fidelity's fund management is advising its shareholders to vote against this proposal.

Fidelity's $72.9 billion Contrafund is one of the mutual funds voting on the proposal at its March 19th shareholders meeting.  Other Fidelity funds voting on the 19th include:  Blue Chip Growth, Blue Chip Value, Capital and Income, Dividend Growth, Equity-Income, Growth and Income, Low-Priced Stock, Puritan, Real Estate Investment Portfolio, Select Health Care Portfolio, and Utilities.

"By supporting the work of Investors Against Genocide, we intend to intensify the drumbeat for Darfur in the investment world," states UUSC President Charlie Clements. "Investors of conscience do not want their savings and their pension funds to be associated with genocide in any form, in any place, in any investment."

The shareholder proposal for genocide-free investing raises the issue of the fundamental management responsibilities of financial institutions and whether shareholders should be able to expect mainstream funds to be genocide-free.  The public's interest in this expectation was highlighted by a 2007 study by KRC Research, in which 71% of respondents said companies should take into account extreme cases of human rights abuses, such as genocide, when investing overseas, rather than base their investment decisions on economic criteria only.

According to Eric Cohen, chairperson of Investors Against Genocide, the non-profit organization that is leading the shareholder action, this proposal requests procedures to avoid future investments in companies complicit in genocide. "When the proposal passes, affected funds with existing investments in problem companies will have two acceptable options," he explains.  "If the holding is substantial enough that the fund can effectively influence the problem company's management and the company is receptive to engagement, then this may be appropriate.  If the holding is relatively small or the problem company does not respond adequately to engagement efforts, then shares should be sold."

"We
support efforts to pressure university endowments, state and municipal pension funds, and mutual funds to sell equity holdings in a targeted list of companies doing business with the Sudanese regime," states John Prendergast, co-chair of The ENOUGH Project, an initiative to end genocide and crimes against humanity.  "Moving forward, the effect of this shareholder proposal is political as much as economic.  It casts genocidal regimes and the companies that support them as pariahs that must change their behavior or be denied international investment capital."  

Cohen urges people who own affected Fidelity mutual funds to watch their mail and email and vote their proxy ballots.  Shareholders who have already discarded their ballots, or would like to change an earlier vote, can do so right up until the meeting is held on the 19th.  Shareholders can contact their Fidelity representative for information on how to vote, or re-vote.

"Ethical investing may mean different things to different people, but surely there is a minimum standard upon which everyone agrees," states Cohen.  "Americans do not want their family savings and pension funds invested in companies that help to fund genocide whether that genocide is occurring today in Darfur or anywhere else in the future.

According to Cohen, many mutual fund investors don't read or vote their proxies because the questions considered are typically routine.  "Many shareholders will be unaware of this first opportunity to vote for genocide-free investing," he says.  "For this reason, we do not expect our proposal to pass on March 19."   However, as the proposal comes before additional funds in the coming months, and as more shareholders become aware of this proposal, Cohen believes that that they will support genocide-free investing.  "Ultimately, we are confident that this resolution will prevail, even though we do not expect a large number of favorable votes at the March 19 meeting."

Many US investment firms have huge holdings of shares in PetroChina, a Chinese oil company that is one of the worst offenders among companies helping to fund the genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan.  Some of the largest holders of PetroChina include the well-known and widely held mutual fund firms Franklin Templeton, American Funds, Fidelity, and Vanguard. 

An increasing number of colleges, universities, and states have taken action to divest from companies that help fund the genocide in Darfur. Thousands of individuals have joined this movement and divested their personal savings from investment firms, like Fidelity, that own shares in such companies.  The related Sudan Accountability and Divestment Act passed both Houses of Congress unanimously and was signed into law by President Bush on December 31, 2007

Hundreds of thousands have been killed and 2.5 million have been driven from their homes, in Darfur.  This humanitarian crisis has been labeled by the US government as the first genocide of the 21st century. The government of Sudan has continued to pursue genocide in Darfur for nearly five years, using as much as 70% of its oil revenue to provide arms and funding for the genocide, rather than economic development for the poor people of Sudan. Although federal law prevents most US companies from operating in Sudan, American financial institutions, notably mutual fund companies, are major investors in the Chinese, Indian, and Malaysian oil companies involved in Sudan which are helping to fund this genocide. As a result, ordinary investors, through their mutual funds, family savings, and pension plans entrusted to these financial institutions are inadvertently investing in genocide.

 

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Investors Against Genocide is a non-profit organization dedicated to convincing mutual fund and other investment firms to change their investing strategy so as to avoid complicity in genocide. The organization works with individuals, companies, organizations, financial institutions, the press, and government agencies to build awareness and to create financial, public relations, and regulatory pressure for investment firms to change. The ultimate goals are that the Government of Sudan ends its deadly genocide in Darfur and that investment firms avoid investing in genocide.  For more information, visit www.investorsagainstgenocide.org.

American Jewish World Service (AJWS) is an international development organization motivated by Judaism's imperative to pursue justice. AJWS is dedicated to alleviating poverty, hunger and disease among the people of the developing world regardless of race, religion or nationality. Through grants to grassroots organizations, volunteer service, advocacy and education, AJWS fosters civil society, sustainable development and human rights for all people, while promoting the values and responsibilities of global citizenship within the Jewish community.  For more information visit www.ajws.org

ENOUGH is a project of the Center for American Progress to end genocide and crimes against humanity. With an initial focus on the crises in Darfur, Chad, eastern Congo, and northern Uganda, ENOUGH's strategy papers and briefings provide sharp field analysis and targeted policy recommendations based on a "3P" crisis response strategy: promoting durable peace, providing civilian protection, and punishing perpetrators of atrocities. ENOUGH works with concerned citizens, advocates, and policy makers to prevent, mitigate, and resolve these crises. To learn more about ENOUGH and what you can do to help, go to www.enoughproject.org.

Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) mobilizes the health professions to advance the health and dignity of all people by protecting human rights. As a founding member of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines, PHR shared the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize. For more information, visit www.physiciansforhumanrights.org

The Aegis Trust campaigns to prevent genocide worldwide.  Aegis was founded in 2000 and has its home at the first Holocaust Centre in the UK, which opened in 1995. Since 2002 Aegis has had an office in Kigali, Rwanda.  Aegis activities include: research, policy, education, remembrance, awareness of genocide issues in the media and humanitarian support for victims of genocide.  For more information, visit www.aegistrust.org

The Genocide Intervention Network is working to build the first permanent anti-genocide constituency in the United States, mobilizing the political will to stop genocide when it occurs. Accessible online at www.GenocideIntervention.net, GI-Net empowers individuals with tools to stop genocide through education, fundraising for civilian protection and advocacy efforts.

The Unitarian Universalist Association is a faith community of more than 1000 self-governing congregations that bring to the world a vision of religious freedom, tolerance and social justice.  For more information on the UUA, including recent press releases and news articles, please visit our online pressroom at www.uua.org/pressroom.

The Unitarian Universalist Service Committee (UUSC), an international human rights organization of over 47,000 members and supporters, advances human rights and social justice around the world, partnering with those who confront unjust power structures and mobilizing to challenge oppressive policies. In addition to protecting rights in humanitarian crises like Darfur, UUSC promotes workers' rights, advances the human right to water, and defends civil liberties in the United States and internationally. For more information, visit www.uusc.org.


 

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Additional information:

  • The Unitarian Universalist Association has joined as a supporter and announced that they will vote their proxies in favor of genocide-free investing on March 19.

  • AJWS sent an email to 30,000 of its members regarding the upcoming vote.  UUSC and UUA also sent emails to their lists.

     

  • PHR is notifying its employees, many of whom have Fidelity 401Ks, about the vote and allowing them to attend the meeting during the workday.

  • Fox News will be running a story on Tuesday, March 18.

We need your support on March 19, 2008 at the
Fidelity Shareholder Meeting on genocide-free investing

We invite you to join us as we picket and leaflet on behalf of Investors Against Genocide prior to the Fidelity shareholder meeting on Wednesday, March 19, 2008.  We are asking everyone to gather outside at 8:15 AM at Fidelity’s offices at 245 Summer Street in downtown Boston, close to the South Station Red Line stop.  See map attached below.

We will pass out IAG T-shirts and signs to the first 30 people who arrive (but will need them returned at the end of the morning.)  Rain or shine - please dress accordingly.  We will picket until 10 AM.

If you are a shareholder of a fund holding a meeting on the 19th you may also attend the meeting which beings at 9:30.  Bring ID (required) and February statement or proxy ballot if available.

Please contact Pat Cassidy to RSVP or with questions at pqcass@aol.com, or 508 240 0616 (h), or 508 259 4061 (c).


 

 

 

CMM    474 Centre Street    Newton, MA 02458    Phone: 617-244-3650
email: info@coopmet.org    Alexander Levering Kern, Executive Director: akern@coopmet.org
 

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