Press Release - for immediate release
contact:
in...@theIPMN.org Presbyterian Leadership Takes Historic Stand LOUISVILLE,
KY - February 17, 2012 - The General Assembly Mission Council (GAMC) of
the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) voted to send a recommendation to the
July meeting of the 220th General Assembly (national Presbyterian
voting body) to divest its holdings from Caterpillar, Inc., Hewlett
Packard, and Motorola Solutions. The original recommendation came from
the denomination’s Mission Responsibility Through Investment Committee
(MRTI) at its meeting of September 2011. MRTI’s recommendation first
went to the GAMC Subcommittee on Justice, who passed it on to the larger
body by unanimous consent.
Brian Ellison, Chair of MRTI, made
presentations to both the subcommittee and the larger body, covering the
long and painstaking process of corporate engagement that led to this
recommendation. A Presbyterian pastor from Kansas City, Ellison made
it clear that MRTI’s attempts at engagement with the top executives of
these companies over the years have borne no fruit and that according to
the Presbyterian Church’s own investment guidelines, MRTI is left
without any choice but to recommend divestment as the last step of the
process. When asked why these companies are being singled out among all
those that do business in Israel, Ellison said that these companies
profit from non-peaceful pursuits by supporting illegal occupation,
which is not in line with Presbyterian values or investment philosophy.
When
a member of the subcommittee mentioned that she had received
information by e-mail from a Presbyterian opponent of divestment
suggesting that MRTI had not gone far enough in contacting company
executives, Ellison disagreed and went on to say that MRTI and its
ecumenical partners persistently contacted CEOs and top executives of
the three companies over several years, and received no meaningful
responses to their questions or concerns.
The Israel Palestine
Mission Network of the PC(USA) [IPMN]commends the General Assembly
Mission Council for this historic vote. Much like the decision by
Presbyterians in 1983 to divest from companies profiting from Apartheid
in South Africa, this is an action that will send a clear message to the
world that our Church will do everything in our power to make sure it
does not profit from violence or the systematic violation of Palestinian
human rights. If history is our guide, then such action, when
combined with those of other religious bodies and individuals of
conscience, will help bring change and transformation to the land that
holds deep meaning for all the people of the three Abrahamic faiths.
About
IPMN: In joyful obedience to the call of Christ, and in solidarity with
churches and our other partners in the Middle East, this network
covenants to engage, consolidate, nourish, and channel the energy in the
Presbyterian Church (USA) toward the goal of a just peace in Israel
/Palestine by facilitating education, promoting partnerships, and
coordinating advocacy.
Our network speaks TO the Church not FOR the Church.
for story by Presbyterian News Service on PC(USA) website,
please click here.