| Hain gets behind Darfur Divestment campaign |
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Massive investments by companies The meeting will see publication of a new dossier on Darfur Divestment by the Aegis Trust, detailing British companies and institutions with holdings in Sudan’s oil sector; Barclays, for example, hold shares to the value of at least £381m in oil companies operating in Sudan. The dossier sets out a strategy for targeted divestment to increase the economic pressure on Khartoum and reduce funding for mass atrocities. Sudan’s oil revenues have increased seventy-fold in recent years, from US$61m in 1999 to to US$4.5bn in 2006, helping the government to triple military expenditure (between 1997 and 2004) and pay the Janjaweed militia responsible for so much of the killing. Stopping a racist government’s oppression Peter Hain, who has been a Government minister since 1997, was a strong advocate of boycotts and other action against the apartheid regime in during the 1970s and 1980s. "The boycott of during apartheid helped to stop a racist government oppressing its black population, and proved what can be achieved when people take a moral stand against human rights abuses,” he says. “The international Darfur divestment campaign, on which Aegis has taken a valuable lead, can have the same effect in.” Eight countries have now initiated targeted Darfur divestment campaigns. Four companies – ABB of Switzerland, Siemens of Germany, Rolls Royce of the , and CHC Helicopter of Canada, have withdrawn recently from , largely in response to the Darfur divestment movement. |
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At 5pm Tuesday 19 June, Labour deputy leadership candidate Peter Hain MP, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, will address a public meeting of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Genocide Prevention, called to discuss targeted divestment and sanctions on over the ongoing ethnic cleansing in Darfur.