http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1159936.html

Last update - 22:55 29/03/2010 


Swedish pension fund bans investment in Israeli company on ethical grounds 

By Haaretz Service 



The biggest Swedish pension fund has barred Israeli defense electronics company 
Elbit Systems from its investment portfolios on ethical grounds, Israel Radio 
reported Monday. 

Following the lead of Norway's state oil fund, the Första AP-Fonden pension 
fund said it had banned investment in Elbit because the Israeli company had 
built and is operating a surveillance system for the much debated West Bank 
separation barrier. 

Critics of the controversial barrier argue that it is an illegal attempt to 
annex Palestinian land under the guise of security and that it severely 
restricts Palestinians who live nearby, particularly their ability to travel 
freely within the West Bank and to access work in Israel. Proponents, however, 
argue that the barrier has greatly reduced the incidence of suicide bombers 
coming from the West Bank and carrying out terror attacks within Israel. 

According to the Swedish website the Swedish Wire, the pension fund said in a 
statement that "the Ethical Council recommended that Elbit Systems Ltd. should 
be excluded from each portfolio because it deems that the company can be linked 
to violations of fundamental conventions and norms." 

In its annual report, the ethical council wrote that "the Council has noted 
that both the European Union and the Swedish government consider the part of 
the separation barrier being built on West Bank to be illegal under 
international law. This position is also supported by the advisory opinion from 
2004 by the International Court of Justice regarding the separation barrier." 

Israel has so far completed 413 kilometers (256 miles) of the planned 
709-kilometer (435-mile) barrier, according to UN figures. 

The Swedish fund, which only had small investments in Elbit according to its 
ethics council chairwoman Annika Andersson, said that Grupo Ferrovial, 
PetroChina, Thales and Yahoo had successfully addressed its concerns about 
ethics violations. 

Last September, Norway's state pension fund, one of the world's biggest 
investors, also banned Elbit from its portfolio, prompting the Israeli Foreign 
Ministry to summon Norway's ambassador in protest at the move. 

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