Last
Wednesday, JVP's Lynn Pollack and Hampshire College student Matan Cohen
attempted to hand-deliver an enormous box filled with nearly 8,000
letters and signatures from you to Caterpillar's CEO Jim Owens. CAT
security barred them from bringing the letters into the corporate
boardroom - but we made sure Mr. Owens knew all of you want CAT to get
out of the business of making money by violating international law (and
he'll get a friendly reminder from us soon enough in the form of a
FedEx package filled with signatures.)
Along
with 5 others from our partner organizations, Matan Cohen, on behalf of
JVP, was able to give a searing talk about CAT complicity in Israeli
human rights violations to a boardroom that included CAT directors,
shareholders, and journalists.
Cohen
reminded the room that just a few months ago, a New York-based U.S.
district judge broke new ground by allowing lawsuits to go forward that
accused companies like General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co., and IBM
Corp. of aiding South Africa's former apartheid regime.
The
judge reasoned that the companies knew that their products and services
were used to violate the human rights of South Africans.
Back
in 2003, JVP and our partners like the Sisters of Loretto made history
when we filed the first shareholder resolution that challenged CAT on
the use of their products to violate the human rights of Palestinians.
Since
then, we have filed new resolutions every year, and our many partners,
such as the US Campaign to End the Occupation and the Stop Cat
Coalition, have been making sure CAT knows its products are being used
to illegally destroy homes and orchards of Palestinians.
That's
probably why, after hearing six people in a row talk about home
demolitions, CAT shareholder Randy Towry spontaneously got up and told
CAT CEO Jim Owens he was concerned that CAT would soon be held liable
for what is being done with its equipment. Owens' response to his
shareholder?? "Sell."
That's
right. CAT CEO Jim Owens actually told Mr. Towry, one of thousands of
CAT shareholders, that if he didn't like the possibility that CAT might
be held liable for human rights violations, he should just sell his
stocks.
In
the recent court case about U.S. corporations aiding apartheid-era
South Africa, Tyler Giannini, a Harvard Law School lecturer and lawyer
for the plaintiffs, said, "It's a signal that corporations can be held
accountable for contributing to human-rights abuses abroad... these
corporations are going to have to face further proceedings in the
court."
Chances are that Caterpillar will one day be held accountable in a US court.
And
our shareholder resolutions, through which we've educated Caterpillar
stockholders and the general public about the use of CAT equipment to
violate human rights, may very well be admitted as evidence against CAT.
Until
that time, we're making sure that Caterpillar is held accountable in
the court of public opinion. Your letters, calls and hard work for the
CAT campaign have made the campaign newsworthy and important; over the
years, Salon, public radio's Marketplace, Bloomberg, Democracy Now, the
Wall Street Journal, Reuters and others have reported on it. By now,
because of the effort and commitment of so many of you, few can hear
the words "Caterpillar, Inc." without associating them with Israeli war
crimes.
For
the last six years, our CAT campaign has made sure that the issue of
Palestinian human rights - and the use of CAT equipment to violate them
- is prominent at the CAT annual meeting. We succeeded in keeping the
issue high on the agenda again this year. We hope that in the next
twelve months, CAT will come to their senses and refuse to let Israel
use its equipment against Palestinians. If they don't, we'll be there
at next year's meeting, again.