Report bishops who get donations from mining companies, says CBCP
The CBCP president made this appeal at the end of the bishop conference’s 128th plenary assembly in Cagayan de Oro City, the first time that their highest-level meeting was held in Mindanao. Much of their discussions revolved around care for the environment, which is a top priority of Pope Francis.
David reiterated a previous commitment by the CBCP “to divest from financial institutions that are involved in businesses that are destructive to the environment, such as extractive mining and anti-life industries.” The Filipino bishops aim to achieve this by 2025.
The bishops also “resolved to stand by our earlier commitment not to accept donations from individuals and companies involved in businesses that are destructive to the environment,” said David during Monday’s press conference.
Dialogue with banks
San Carlos Bishop Gerardo Alminaza, vice chairman of the CBCP’s justice and peace commission, said that the Catholic Church has devised “a score card to help us identify financial institutions, mainly banks, that have investments or are giving loans to these industries that are harming the environment.”
Alminaza said that Catholic dioceses, through their bishops, have been using their status as bank depositors or stockholders as they dialogue with banks involved.
David, who was seated beside Alminaza during the press conference, later clarified that Alminaza “is using the word ‘our’ in a corporate sense because they are not our personal investments as bishops,” but “are the investments of our institutions.”
Rodne Galicha, executive director of the group Living Laudato Si’ Philippines, was one of those who assisted the bishops during their Cagayan de Oro plenary assembly.
In the #faith chat room of the Rappler Communities app late Monday afternoon, Galicha noted how “public disclosures show that there have been Catholic institutions and entities which actually divested” from financial institutions linked to mining.
Galicha said that at least seven Catholic institutions have “either totally or partially divested” as of March 2024.
“However, divestment does not only include withdrawing shares or investments but also influencing companies and banks to divert finances to renewable energy and genuinely sustainable ventures. Dialogue is very important for ecological conversion,” Galicha said in Rappler’s #faith chat room. – Rappler.com
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