Canadian students launch campaign to divest from the Israeli occupation of Palestine
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By Adam Horowitz
Mondoweiss
Thursday, Feb 4, 2010
For the past several months, Students
Against Israeli Apartheid – Carleton (SAIA), a student group at Carleton
University in Ottawa that is committed to supporting the Palestinian struggle
for freedom, has been conducting research on Carleton’s investments in Israeli
apartheid. The Carleton Pension Fund currently lacks any ethical guidelines,
with its only mandate being the maximization of profit. SAIA has discovered that
the Pension Fund, which provides retirement income for Carleton staff and
faculty, currently has some $2,762,535 invested in five companies that are
complicit in the oppression of the Palestinian people. In light of these
findings, SAIA has launched a campaign calling on Carleton to immediately divest
from the offending corporations: Motorola, BAE Systems, Northrop Grumman, L-3
Communications, and Tesco supermarkets, as well as to adopt a socially
responsible investment policy for all of its investments.
Motorola is involved in designing and implementing perimeter surveillance
systems around illegal Israeli settlements and military camps in the West Bank.
Motorola and its subsidiaries also have hundreds of millions of dollars worth of
contracts to supply the Israeli military with telecommunications technology,
checkpoint security and control systems. By providing support for the Israeli
military, Motorola plays a role in ensuring that settlement expansion will
continue, and that the occupation will deepen, in a clear violation of
international law.
BAE Systems is the world’s third-largest arms producer. Both BAE and its
Israeli subsidiary, Rokar, contribute to weaponry used by Israel to attack
Palestinian civilians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza. BAE produces cluster
bombs and the F-16 combat aircraft, which were used during the 2008-2009 assault
on the Gaza Strip, which killed over 1,400 Palestinians, most of whom were
non-combatant civilians.
Northrop Grumman, one of the world’s largest weapon’s manufacturers, provided
the Israeli military with many of the parts for the Apache AH64D Longbow
Helicopter, which was described by Amnesty International as a piece of “key
equipment used by the [Israeli military] in the [December 2008 – January 2009]
Gaza bombing campaign.” Furthermore, Northrop Grumman is the sole provider of
radars for the F-16 combat aircraft. It also assists in producing the Longbow
Hellfire 2 missiles, which, as has been documented by many human rights
organizations, were widely used against Palestinian civilians in Gaza.
L-3 Communications is one of the many large multinational firms aiding in the
construction and maintenance of the system of military checkpoints that severely
restrict Palestinian freedom of movement in the West Bank and around Gaza. The
matrix of checkpoints has been condemned by human rights organizations as a
brutally repressive system that violates the basic human rights of the
Palestinian people. In addition to being a means of political repression and
land annexation, the checkpoints constitute a tool of collective punishment,
which is a crime under international law.
Tesco Supermarkets is a large United Kingdom-based international grocery and
general merchandising retail chain. It has been the target of social justice
activists in the U.K. for selling produce originating from illegal Israeli
settlements, for mislabeling products coming from the settlements as “West
Bank”, as well as for using an exporter, Carmel-Agrexco, which has been
criticized for using slavery-type working conditions in its factories in the
occupied West Bank. Tesco’s financial support for the illegal Israeli
settlements lends them legitimacy and enables their economic growth and physical
expansion, while simultaneously inhibiting the development of the Palestinian
economy.
Click here for the full divestment briefing that the students plan on
presenting to the university’s Board of Governors.
Carleton is no stranger to BDS activism, and it has a strong precedent to
build upon. In 1987, Carleton divested from all companies complicit in the
apartheid regime in South Africa. Carleton’s president at the time wrote a
memorandum, saying, “Carleton University abhors apartheid and will do all it can
to show its position on apartheid within its business practices.” Given
Carleton’s past commitment to divesting from apartheid regimes, SAIA is calling
on the university to once again place itself on the right side of history by
ending its investments in the ongoing oppression of the Palestinian people.
The South African victory serves as an inspiring model for SAIA’s divestment
campaign, which is the first Palestine-centred divestment initiative in Canada.
Hopes are high that, through a well-planned local campaign, as well as the
natural growth of BDS, momentum will pick up at universities across the country
and similar initiatives will emerge to form a national movement to cut campus
ties with Israeli apartheid.
Specifically, SAIA recommends that:
1. The Carleton University Board of Governors, via the Pension Fund
Committee, immediately divest of its stock in BAE Systems, L-3 Communications,
Motorola, Northrop Grumman, and Tesco
2. Carleton University refrain from investing in other companies involved in
violations of international law (for recommended guidelines see
Conclusions/Recommendations section of the divestment report)
3. Carleton University work with the entire university community to develop,
adopt, and implement a broader policy of Socially Responsible Investment (SRI)
for its Pension Fund and other investments, through a transparent and effective
process.
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