Tiles from the Quaker Peace Garden, Bristol |
By Rachel Zoll, AP Religion Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -- A firm that manages assets for U.S. Quakers
has sold its holdings in three companies after investors raised concerns about
their dealings with Israel.
Friends Fiduciary Corp., a Philadelphia nonprofit, sold its
shares in Caterpillar Inc., Hewlett-Packard Co. and Veolia Environment after a
review was requested by the Ann Arbor Friends Meeting. The Michigan Quaker group
wanted to avoid investments in companies that provided products to the Israeli
military.
Jeffery Perkins, the Friends Fiduciary executive director,
said the nonprofit does not comment on its investment decisions. However, he
confirmed the contents of a letter he wrote to Ann Arbor Friends last month
stating the fund could not determine whether the products Caterpillar and
Hewlett-Packard sold to Israel would be considered "weapons components"
according to criteria Friends Fiduciary uses for responsible investing.
"In the absence of that information, we chose to sell our
holdings based on the peace testimony," Perkins wrote, citing the core Quaker
teaching against the use of weapons.
The fund dropped Veolia because of "environmental and social
concerns," Perkins wrote in the letter. Activists protesting Israeli policy in
the territories say Veolia holds contracts to transfer trash from Jewish housing
settlements in disputed areas. A North American spokesman for Veolia could not
be reached for comment.
Caterpillar equipment gained notoriety in March 2003 when an
armored bulldozer crushed an American activist, Rachel Corrie, in the southern
Gaza Strip while she tried to prevent it from toppling a home. A subsequent
military investigation ruled Corrie's death an accident.
Caterpillar spokesman Jim Dugan said in a statement that the
company does not equip tractors with armor or sell directly to the Israeli
military. Instead, he explained that bulldozers such as the D9 tractor are first
traded to the U.S. government and then resold to Israel, among other countries,
which can then outfit the bulldozers for their own use.
"As a values-based company, Caterpillar has deep respect and
compassion for all persons affected by the political strife in the Middle East
and supports a peaceful resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict," Dugan
said. "However, we believe it is appropriate for such a resolution to be reached
via political and diplomatic channels."
Friends Fiduciary said it had reviewed Hewlett-Packard's
information technology consulting with the Israeli Navy. A Hewlett-Packard
spokeswoman declined to comment Wednesday.
Perkins did not release a dollar value for its investments
in the three companies. Friends Fiduciary says it manages about $200 million for
nearly 300 Quaker groups.
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