Friday, October 05, 2007

NZSF supports oppression in Burma

Back in February, we learned that the New Zealand Superannuation Fund was investing in companies that manufacture nuclear weapons. Today, we learn that they're also investing in oppression in Burma. The Dominion-Post reports that the fund has admitted having investments in Total Oil named by the Burma Campaign UK as "the main supporter of the Burmese military regime":

TOTAL Oil is the fourth largest oil company in the world and one of the biggest foreign investors in Burma. Its joint venture with Burma’s dictatorship earns the military regime hundreds of millions of dollars every year.

Widespread systematic human rights abuses have been associated with the TOTAL pipeline, including forced labour, torture and rape.

Based on the latter alone, this is not a company anyone should be investing in, if only for the naked financial reason that one day they will be sued by one of their victims in a US court and bankrupted. And it is certainly not a company the New Zealand government (which remember "stand[s] up for the rule of law and the human rights upheld by the United Nations") should be goign near.

The NZSF also admits to investing in China's Sinopec and Malaysia's Petronas, but its worse than that. Comparing their 2006 equity portfolio to the Burma Campaign's dirty list turns up quite a list:

CompanyInvestment
Alcatel$521,984
Baker-Hughes$870,674
BJ Services$9,750,411
Chevron$12,753,174
DBS Group Holdings$956,721
GAIL India$856,567
Hutchison Whampoa$1,316,554
Ivanhoe Mines$56,320
Keppel Co$350,414
Kajima$278,641
Marubeni$4,512,730
Mitsui$4,309,373
Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance$2,326,065
Nippon Oil$2,650,055
OCBC$699,087
Rolls Royce$537,715
Siemens$1,637,570
Sompo Japan$1,720,446
Sumitomo$3,569,711
Sumitomo Mitsui Financial$12,160,830
Suzuki$177,421
Taisei$269,680
United Overseas Bank$759,904

That's $63 million of our money which is helping to prop up the Burmese regime.

Not investing in companies which torture and not investing in Burma are two fundamentals of any ethical investment policy. But clearly, our superannuation fund doesn't give a shit.