Premier Oil Get Out Of Burma
Zoe Broughton | 14.05.2002 16:29
Premier Oil, a UK based company, is working within Burma, a country run by a cruel military dictatorship. Premier Oil's money is financially supporting this military regime, known for its torture and imprisonment of all who campaign for democracy. At their annual general meeting, May 10th London, protestors demanded Premier get out of Burma. (article 2)
Zoe Broughton
e-mail:
zoeb@gn.apc.org
Homepage:
www.freeburmacoalition.org
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Microsoft video of Premier AGM
14.05.2002 17:18
Microsoft video of Premier AGM - video/x-ms-wmv
duration 2 minutes 20 seconds
Zoe Broughton
e-mail: zoeb@gn.apc.org
Burma update
15.05.2002 10:30
Wan Pu looked after me when I was ill there, kindly giving me rehydration sachets, despite the fact they had so little for themselves. I feel pretty useless here on what I can do to help him. All ideas welcome.
Zoe Broughton
e-mail: zoeb@gn.apc.org
record Burma vote at Unocal AGM
24.05.2002 14:51
It is a significant increase over the votes cast for a similar motion last year.
In the final tally released yesterday by Unocal, the workplace rights resolution garnered 31.34% of the voted shares, with an additional 4.47% of the voting shares abstaining on the resolution. Last year's motion gained approximately 23 percent of the vote.
The resolution tabled this year urges the board of directors to adopt and implement a company-wide employee policy based on the Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work. This key declaration by the UN's International Labour Organisation (ILO) includes bans on child labour and forced labour.
The Longview Collective Investment Fund of the Amalgamated Bank and the Paper, Allied-Industrial, Chemical & Energy Workers International Union (PACE) sponsored the Unocal resolution proposal.
Unocal came under pressure this year from representatives of the 20-million-strong International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers' Unions (ICEM), the US national labour federation AFL-CIO and PACE, as well as religious and human rights activists, concerning the company's ongoing investments in Burma. Unocal is a joint venture partner in a gas pipeline project there with a firm owned by the Burmese military dictatorship. Pressed over a recent media report that Unocal and the Burmese regime were considering a new gas pipeline to India, Unocal CEO Charles Williamson publicly stated that the company would refrain from expanding its investments in Burma.
Further union support for Monday's vote was mobilised in Britain, where the Trades Union Congress (TUC) contacted over 100 pension funds and lobbied key investors. Information about the resolution was also sent to all 630 members of the TUC Trustees Network. A number of large UK institutional investors, including fund manager CIS and some individual pension funds, decided to vote in favour or to abstain.
The Unocal vote is "a great success for global labour solidarity," commented ICEM General Secretary Fred Higgs. "It also demonstrates increased social awareness by investors."
"We are very pleased with this very strong vote," said ICEM North American Regional Coordinator Kenneth Zinn. "It is long past time for Unocal to pay serious attention to its exposure in countries that violate human rights and adopt a new policy that respects workers' rights."
Tom