"I am Native to my land. I love my land and all I want to do is protect it 
for my great grandchildren, why is that so wrong? 
Stop fossil fuel corporations from destroying the
land and water now, Mni Wiconi."

LaDonna Brave Bull Allard, Lakota
Ta Maka Waste Win-Her Good Earth Woman
Lakota Historian, Genealogist, Water Protector, 
and member of the Standing Rock Sioux
Dear Friends and Allies,

Divest Invest Protect  (DIP), the Women's Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN) International , and the Indigenous Peoples Law and Policy (IPLP) Program at the University of Arizona are announcing the filing of a "Specific Instance" with the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) regarding Credit Suisse and adverse impacts to Indigenous peoples and environment through continued corporate finance to firms that built the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) and Bayou Bridge Pipeline (BBP).

The filing by Indigenous women, comes after an almost two year period of WECAN and DIP exchanges with Credit Suisse involving letters, two in-person meetings with Credit Suisse representatives, ongoing correspondence to share information of violations and adverse impacts, and further documentation at the 2018 Credit Suisse Annual General Meeting in Zurich, Switzerland. 

Indigenous women have maintained good faith dialogue with Credit Suisse, however, due to a lack of action by Credit Suisse, they are lodging an OECD Specific Instance in hopes that it will act as a catalyst for action towards civil dialogue, justice, remedy, and human rights accountability. 

While Credit Suisse has recently signed the global Principles for Responsible Banking, a set of principles to align financial institutions' business strategy with society's goals, the bank continues to heavily finance the fossil fuel industry, which adversely impacts the rights of Indigenous peoples, and is driving the climate crisis. Since the signing of the Paris Climate Agreement, Credit Suisse has spent more than $57 billion funding the fossil fuel life cycle
, and is one of Europe's top ten financiers of extreme fossil fuels.

Michelle Cook, Dine' (Navajo)
Human rights lawyer, Founder  of Divest Invest Protect,  Co-Director of the Indigenous Women's Divestment Delegations
"The OECD Specific Instance prepared and filed by indigenous women  will bring much-needed attention to the structural failures of the financial industry to adhere and align with indigenous people's human rights. We are confident that our filing and engagement will expose the dangerous loopholes 
that allow banks and businesses to act with impunity over our cultural survival, climate, and futures.
The financial sector must listen 
to the movements of indigenous peoples, and guarantee that human rights and indigenous peoples rights to free, prior, and informed consent will be respected and protected throughout their supply chains, in all their business relationships irrespective of the type of 
finance or financial product the banks  have provided."
Divest Invest Protect (DIP) and the Women's Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN) are calling for accountability for human and Indigenous rights at every level of financial decisions, including corporate financing. For more information, please read the full press release at the button below.
"I am descended from Sitting Bull's band. In 2014 prior to the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) our Tribal Council informed the company that wanted to build DAPL, that they would not and could not consent to the construction of this pipeline. The danger was too close and an oil spill would be disastrous for our eight communities on Standing Rock. We immediately put a call out to the world. We asked people to come and stand with us. For nearly seven months my family and I camped along the Cannonball River with thousands of others who came to support us. During that time my four children and I witnessed firsthand the extreme and brutal human rights abuses that were committed against our people and others in our homelands. These human rights abuses included:private security contractors using attack dogs on unarmed people (including myself), being terrorized by low flying aircraft that circled our camps 24 hours a day, to shooting our horses and people by law enforcement.  My Tribal Government explicitly said no to DAPL. Our communities on Standing Rock said no to DAPL. There was no Free, Prior or Informed Consent as required under International Law in accordance with the U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. It is time to hold the decision makers, government officials and financial institutions accountable. It is time for them to answer to the people in my community, the very people affected by their funding of DAPL." 

Wasté Wi Yellow Lodge-Young
Lakota/Dakota, Standing Rock Nation
Watch the video
Indigenous Women's Divestment Delegation Confronts Credit Suisse at Shareholder Meeting
Indigenous Women's Divestment Delegation at the
Credit Suisse Shareholder Meeting


For more information on pipeline and fossil fuel extraction resistance campaigns:
"In the pursuit of justice and climate mitigation, WECAN International is calling for financial institutions engaged in fossil fuel extraction and development projects to stop business as usual given egregious violations against Indigenous peoples and their lands as we face the unprecedented challenge of a world plunging into climate chaos. Credit Suisse needs to listen to Indigenous women and adhere to their demands, which are founded on requests for basic respect for obtaining Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) of Indigenous communities, as required under international law. It is far past time for financial institutions to be held accountable for both project level and corporate level financing, and the OECD filing is a pivotal contribution to the ongoing global struggle to respect FPIC and to transition off of fossil fuels. Now is the time for banks to move toward a just and sustainable future for all where the rights of Indigenous people are upheld and we protect climate and communities."

Osprey Orielle Lake
Executive Director of the Women's Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN) and Co-Director of the Indigenous Women's Divestment Delegations
For the Earth and All Generations,

The WECAN International Team
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