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UPDATE 2-Norway fund shuns G4S over human rights violation risks

Thu, 14th Nov 2019 09:50

* Fund concerned about treatment of workers in Qatar, UAE

* G4S is world's largest security firm

* Shares fall on news

* Largest SWFs: http://tmsnrt.rs/2tskfub
(Adds bullet points, detail, updates share)

By Gwladys Fouche and Terje Solsvik

OSLO, Nov 14 (Reuters) - Norway's $1.1 trillion wealth fund
can no longer invest in G4S because of the "unacceptable
risk" that the security services company contributes to, or is
responsible for human rights violations, the central bank said
on Thursday.

G4S had no immediate comment but said it was formulating a
response. Norway's fund held a 2.33% stake in G4S at the end of
2018, worth some $90 million at the time, according to fund's
own data.

G4S shares fell on the news, declining from 204.8 pence just
ahead of the 0900 GMT announcement to 200.8 shortly after. At
1021 GMT they were trading at 203.0 pence.

Norway's sovereign wealth fund, the world's largest,
operates under ethical guidelines set by parliament.

It has excluded 156 firms so far, including for producing
tobacco, nuclear weapons, causing severe environmental damage,
or deriving more than 30% of revenues from coal.

G4S exclusion from the fund was based on an assessment of
the company'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," the Council of Ethics statement
said.

"The Council's investigations also revealed long working
days, a lack of overtime payment and examples of harassment."

G4S employs around 18,000 workers in the two countries, the
ethics council said, quoting a letter it received from the
company this year.

G4S is the world's largest private security company with
more than half a million employees in 90 countries, its website
said.

The fund, created with the wealth from Norway's oil
industry, owns shares in 9,158 companies, 1.4% of the world's
listed equity, so decisions to drop or reinstate companies from
its investments carry considerable weight among investors.

The issue of human rights in the Gulf States has long been
on the agenda of the fund's ethics watchdog. It had looked
previously at the practice of the construction companies working
in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, among other companies.

In March, the chair of the Council on Ethics Johan H.
Andresen told Reuters one of its recommendations could involve a
company breaching the human rights of its workers in the Gulf
states.

The fund gradually sells shares in any company it wishes to
drop, before any announcement is made. The main aim is to remove
the ethical risk.

(Editing by Mark Potter/Dale Hudson/Jane Merriman)

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