World

Norway fund drops China, India firms over Myanmar weapons

Central bank decides to exclude AviChina Industry & Technology, Bharat Electronics over alleged arms sales

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 25 Jan 2023 11:30PM

Norway fund drops China, India firms over Myanmar weapons
Norway’s sovereign wealth fund says it had divested from AviChina Industry & Technology and Bharat Electronics due to the ‘unacceptable risk that the companies are selling weapons to a state that uses these weapons in ways that constitute serious and systematic breaches of the international rules on the conduct of hostilities’. – AFP pic, January 25, 2023

OSLO – Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, the world’s biggest, has excluded two companies from China and India for selling weapons to Myanmar, the Norwegian central bank said.

The fund said it had divested from AviChina Industry & Technology and Bharat Electronics due to the “unacceptable risk that the companies are selling weapons to a state that uses these weapons in ways that constitute serious and systematic breaches of the international rules on the conduct of hostilities”.

The fund – which was valued at 13.2 trillion kroner (RM5.7 trillion, US$1.3 trillion) today – owned 0.37% of the Chinese group and 0.32% of the Indian company at the end of 2021, the most recent figures available.

It said AviChina had delivered light aeroplanes in December 2021 to Myanmar, which has been in turmoil since Aung San Suu Kyi’s civilian government was toppled in an army coup almost two years ago.

Bharat Electronics, meanwhile, delivered a remote-controlled weapons station to Myanmar in July 2021.

The decision to exclude the two companies was taken by Norway’s central bank, based on a recommendation by an ethics board.

The fund, in which the Norwegian state’s oil revenues are placed, is one of the biggest investors in the world with stakes in more than 9,000 companies.

It also has holdings in bonds and real estate.

It is governed by rules that prohibit it from investing in companies involved in serious human rights violations, those that manufacture “particularly inhumane” or nuclear weapons, as well as coal and tobacco products.

As a result, it has previously divested from a number of companies, including Airbus, Boeing, Glencore, Lockheed Martin and Philip Morris. – AFP, January 25, 2023

Related News

Malaysia / 1mth

Malaysia’s missile deal collapse exposes hidden risks in global arms trade

Opinion / 1mth

Norway harshly cancels NSM missile supply contract to Malaysia

Malaysia / 1mth

Japanese murder suspect changes identity, disguises himself as a Myanmar national to enter Malaysia

Heritage / 4mth

DRIG calls for erection of monument in memory of those who perished

Malaysia / 7mth

Deceived by job offer, 19-year-old ends up as human trafficking victim

Opinion / 11mth

Anwar Ibrahim and a nation in transition

Spotlight

Community

Penang new top cop looks to AI to help fight online fraud

By Ian McIntyre

World

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer announces resignation

Malaysia

Zara Inquest: Court to decide in July whether stepsister to testify

Malaysia

Future of our nation rests on the rakyat, not political monkeys

Malaysia

Bersama to contest 15 Johor seats in upcoming state election

Malaysia

Middle East conflict: Costs to Malaysia rise close to 20%, raising food production pressures

Malaysia

MACC probes elephant transfer deal after RM53 million leak claims surface

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Malaysia, Bangladesh seek solution to Rohingya ethnic issue through ASEAN

You may be interested

World

Oil prices rise after Iran shuts Hormuz again, Trump threatens new attacks

World

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer announces resignation

World

US waives Iran sanctions as peace talks deliver breakthrough on regional ceasefire

World

76-year-old killed after Tesla 'on auto-pilot' crashes into her home

World

US-Iran talks yield 60-day roadmap as Strait Of Hormuz reopens, easing fears of global energy shock

World

Trump blames Starmer’s leadership failings as British PM steps down as Labour leader

World

Man jailed for molesting Singapore Airlines stewardess while friends laughed