Swiss bank becomes largest international
shareholder of HAGL days after Deutsche Bank
No sooner had German financial institution Deutsche Bank
divested itself of a Vietnamese company accused of massive land grabbing than
another European finance house has emerged in its place.
Environmental watchdog Global Witness said Credit Suisse
became the largest institutional shareholder in rubber giant Hoang Anh Gia Lai
(HAGL), in direct contravention of Credit Suisse’s commitments to human rights.
The investment was apparently made just two weeks after
Global Witness exposed a range of environmental and human rights abuses in the
company’s plantations in Cambodia and Laos.
“This is very worrying. Credit Suisse became a major shareholder
in HAGL just when any responsible investor would be blacklisting them,” said
Megan MacInnes from Global Witness.
“What kind of checks can Credit Suisse have done if it
thought this was a good time to provide finance to a company like HAGL?”
German financial institution Deutsche Bank divested its investments in HAGL
earlier this year after a landmark Global Witness report was released detailing
land grabbing practices by Vietnamese companies in Laos and Cambodia.
That report went a long way towards unraveling some of the
corporate mysteries surrounding land grabbing by rubber producers in Vietnam.
According to that
report, privately owned HAGL and state-owned Vietnamese
Rubber Group (VRG) acquired more than 200,000 hectares of land through a
series of deals with the Lao and Cambodian governments that lacked
transparency.
The deal was backed by the World Bank’s International
Finance Corp (IFC) and Deutsche Bank, resulting in widespread devastation
to the environment and to local livelihoods. The report noted that these
investments stand in stark contrast to both institutions’ public commitments to
ethics and sustainability, as well as the World Bank’s core mandate to end
global poverty.
“Credit Suisse talks a good game, but it’s actively enabling
the land-grabbing crisis that’s sweeping across Cambodia and Laos by financing
this company. The bank trades heavily on signing up to ethical initiatives like
the UN Global Compact and the Equator Principles, so why is it profiting from
the misery of those who’ve lost their land and forests to HAGL?” MacInnes
added.
Credit Suisse obtained its stake through a bond swap while
HAGL founder and chairman, Doan Nguyen Duc, remains the company’s biggest
shareholder.
Global Witness is urging Credit Suisse to review its due
diligence processes to ensure its investments fund fair and sustainable development
models rather than land grabs and deforestation.
Luke Hunt for The Diplomat
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