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OSLO, Nov 14 (Reuters) - Norway's $1.1 trillion wealth fund
can no longer invest in security services firm G4S
because of the "unacceptable risk that the company contributes
to, or is responsible, for serious or systematic human rights
violations", the central bank said in a statement, sending the
company's shares lower.
G4S had no immediate comment but said it was formulating a
response.
The wealth fund, the world's largest, has an ethical profile
and excludes companies from its investments for what it deems to
be ethical breaches.
The exclusion from the fund was based on an assessment of
G4S's operations in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, the
fund's ethics watchdog, the Council on Ethics, said in a
separate statement.
Many of G4S's employees in the two Gulf countries are
migrant workers who paid recruitment fees to join the company,
the council said.
"When the workers arrive in the Gulf, they must spend a
significant part of their salary to pay off this debt, and
therefore have little chance of leaving. Many also received far
lower wages than agreed, and in the Emirates, the workers got
their passport confiscated," it wrote.
"The Council’s investigations also revealed long working
days, a lack of overtime payment and examples of harassment," it
added.
G4S employs around 18,000 workers in the two countries, the
ethics council said, quoting a letter it received from the
company this year.
The share price of G4S fell on the news, declining from
204.8 pence just ahead of the 0900 GMT announcement to 200.8
shortly after. At 0924 GMT it was trading at 203.3 pence.
At the end of 2018, the fund held a 2.33% stake in the
company worth some $90 million, according to fund data.
When a company is excluded, the fund progressively sells its
stake ahead of the announcement so that when a decision is made
public, it no longer has any share in an excluded company.
(Reporting by Gwladys Fouche and Terje Solsvik; Editing by Mark
Potter and Dale Hudson)