In the media

Publish What You Pay Letter to the Times


­ECCR supports the Publish What You Pay (PWYP) letter to the Times of­ 14 June 2013 regarding Global Mandatory Transparency Standards.

Here is a link to the letter on the PWYP website. ­

You can view a pdf of the letter here­












Report asking for Free Prior Informed Consent to become a reality launched in London

­­­­Indigenous Peoples Links (PIPLinks) Press release

2 May 2013
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There is now a growing acceptance of the requirement for indigenous peoples’ Free Prior Informed Consent (FPIC) in many industries, including the extractive industries. This has been reflected by its incorporation into policies of an increasing number of mining companies, although admittedly sometimes in a more diluted form.

As the need for FPIC is introduced into state law, and made a requirement of financing, companies are increasingly struggling with how to implement FPIC. Yet, for indigenous peoples it is clear that their right to give or withhold FPIC should be seen in a context of them as rights-holders, rather than just yet another stake-holder. Therefore, there seemed to be a need for research to act as a basis for constructing a common ground with regard to the requirement for indigenous peoples’ FPIC.

The report, Making Free Prior & Informed Consent a Reality: Indigenous Peoples and the Extractive Sector seeks to do just that. Authored by Cathal Doyle and Jill Carino, it advocates for multinational mining companies, the investor community, and state actors to understand the importance of the FPIC principle from ethical, sustainability and economic perspectives. Fundamentally it argues that it is essential to understand FPIC from an indigenous peoples’ rights-based perspective in order to effectively implement it in a manner whichis in accordance with indigenous peoples’ exercising their right to self-determination.

The report was launched at Middlesex University in London on 2nd May, involving a round-table discussion of the report's contents by indigenous peoples, representatives of the mining industry and invited experts. This was followed by a public launch, at which a number of the indigenous peoples spoke about what FPIC meant to them, following on from a keynote address by the UN Special Rapporteur on Indigenous Peoples, Professor James Anaya. Professor Anaya stressed the importance of FPIC as part of a bundle of rights, and yet how, so far, its implementation was often far from adequate. He noted how both the round-table, and the report itself, were an excellent push forward in the implementation of FPIC.

Anne Marie Sam of the Nak'azdli First Nation in Canada stressed what the concept meant to her. Her elders had noted that the “souls of our ancestors are on the land. You take care of the land and the land takes care of you. Our identity comes from the land”. She joined other speakers in passionately advocating for their right to decide their own fate. They stressed the growing importance of indigenous peoples organising, so that they could assert these rights. They also spoke to the emerging theme of indigenous communities defining their own culturally appropriate guidelines for implementing FPIC, which is reviewed – with the aid of case studies - in the report.

The research was conducted on behalf of a consortium of organisations, including Indigenous Peoples Links (PIPLinks), Ecumenical Council for Corporate Responsibility (ECCR), and the  Middlesex University School of Law, but backed by a larger number of indigenous advisors and organisations. It is part of a project which aims to promote the human rights of indigenous peoples by persuading leading multinational mining companies to abide by their obligations under international human rights standards. Specifically, the project aims to achieve sector-wide adoption of FPIC as the global mining industry standard, in order to safeguard the rights of indigenous peoples faced with mining operations in their territories. The report can be ­viewed here (along with an extract of the conclusions and recommendations, together with a Word version of a Spanish translation of the extract). Photos of the public launch are available on requestContact: Andy Whitmore, Indigenous Peoples Links (PIPLinks)Mobile: +44 775 439 5597­Email: comms@piplinks.org­­

 

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Banks and society - rebuilding trust - The Friend

April 2011

It is just over two and a half years since Lehman Brothers bank filed a petition for bankruptcy. The event was a defining moment in recent times and the shock waves are still affecting us...

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Churches light the path to shareholder engagement – Financial News

April 2011

The declaration by Goldman Sachs chief executive Lloyd Blankfein in late 2009 that he was doing God’s work was perhaps at odds with most people’s understanding of banking. Unlike other investors, however, churches are naturally attuned to the post-crisis clamour about ethics and good governance...

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Giles Fraser: Get to grips with banks’ morality – Church Times

February 2011

‘The corporate tax affairs of an organisation like Barclays are com plex, and not reducible to simplistic comparisons,’ Barclays said. But it is not all that complex. Barclays has paid just 2.4 per cent corporation tax on its 2009 profit of £4.6 billion. Many people are justifiably out raged, not least because it seems that we have been round this one time and again...

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Christians can lead in investing for a better future - Independent Catholic News

November 2010

There are grounds for optimism that a ‘positive impact’ approach to investing can speed up society’s progress to a fairer and more environmentally sustainable economic system, and churches can help lead the way. This was the encouraging message from four expert speakers at a well-attended public panel debate organised by ECCR...

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Where to lay your treasure - now more opportunities for ethical investment than ever before – Church Times

November 2010

Could ethical investment be the new fair trade? Congregations all over the UK are drinking Fairtrade coffee, and selling fairly traded goods. The organisers of National Ethical Investment Week (NEIW) are hoping that ethical investment will become popular among churches and individual Christians in the same way...

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National ethical investment week - The Friend

November 2010

Britain’s third National Ethical Investment Week (NEIW) is underway with talks and seminars around the country promoting the cause of responsible investment. NEIW aims to ensure that everyone knows that they have green and ethical options when it comes to their finance and investment decisions...

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Irish Quakers tackle ethical investment issues - The Friend

November 2010

'Making our money work for a better world' was the title of a very successful gathering in Dublin during the recent National Ethical Investment Week, organised by EcoQuakers Ireland in association with the Ecumenical Council for Corporate Responsibility (ECCR)...

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Right way to riches – The Tablet

August 2010

While ethical investment funds still amount to only a tenth of the market, many of the concerns that underpin this sector of the industry, such as climate change, energy and pay levels, are now increasingly being championed by the mainstream...

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Reproduced with permission - www.thetablet.co.uk



Keeping the faith – Shared Interest

Summer 2010 

Sally Reith, Shared Interest Supporter Relations Officer for the South East, interviewed Miles Litvinoff, Coordinator of ECCR, to find out more about the organisation and how he sees the relationship with Shared Interest growing...

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Churches aspire to ethical investment – Financial News

April 2010 ­

Christian investors have been holding their heads high of late, and not just because last week they were celebrating Easter, the most important period in their religious calendar. They had a relatively good financial crisis ... The Ecumenical Council for Corporate Responsibility, a voluntary coalition of church-based investors and ethical asset managers, has seen Co-operative Financial Services and Triodos Bank join its ranks ....

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Christian ethicists slam company in which churches have largest shareholding - Ekklesia

February 2010

As Shell faces a lawsuit in the Netherlands over alleged oil pollution in Nigeria, and a fresh challenge over plans to drill for billions of barrels of oil in the Arctic's environmentally sensitive frozen waters, a new report published today argues that the oil giant can and should take both prompt and longer-term action to reduce the negative social and environmental impacts of its operations in the Niger Delta ...

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Gangmasters need tighter controls – Church Times

November 2009

Migrant workers are still struggling in subhuman conditions, says Richard Harries. When 23 Chinese cockle-pickers were drowned in Morecambe Bay in February 2004, the country was alerted to the existence of gangmasters. These gangmasters recruited vulnerable workers - mainly migrants, both legal and illegal - with great scope for abuse...

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Columban priest tackles a mining giant - Independent Catholic News

November 2009

A Columban priest has challenged the environmental and human rights record of the world’s biggest mining company at its recent AGM on 29 October. Attending alongside other justice and peace activists and indigenous Wayuu people from Colombia, he called on BHP Billiton to respect the human rights of local people in mining areas around the world. Also, to care for water, air and biodiversity which are often polluted by large scale mining, thus destroying livelihoods ...

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