Appendix C:

Human Rights Watch Letter Sent to Forty-Seven U.S. Companies

[Date]

Dear X:

Human Rights Watch, on behalf of the U.S. Campaign to Ban Landmines (USCBL), will release a list of U.S. companies identified as manufacturers (past and present) of antipersonnel mines, mine components, and mine delivery systems. Your company is currently on the list, based on primary source material provided mainly by the U.S. government.

The USCBL, a coalition of more than one hundred non-governmental organizations across the country, will be launching a major public awareness initiative aimed at stigmatizing companies involved in the production of antipersonnel mines. The USCBL will be widely publicizing the names of companies and calling on shareholders and other citizens to take actions to encourage them to no longer manufacture antipersonnel mines.

Antipersonnel mines are indiscriminate weapons that kill or maim an estimated 26,000 civilians each year in more than twenty-six countries around the globe. The U.S. first endorsed the goal of the elimination of antipersonnel mines in 1994, and in May 1996 President Clinton announced, "The United States will seek a worldwide agreement as soon as possible to end the use of all antipersonnel landmines. The United States will lead this global effort to eliminate these terrible weapons and to stop the enormous loss of human life." More than forty nations, including many of our NATO allies, have called for an immediate ban on antipersonnel mines. Among the countries that have recently prohibited production of antipersonnel mines are Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal and Switzerland.

Human Rights Watch and the USCBL call on your company to make the decision to not take part in the production of antipersonnel mines. We encourage you to do so prior to the publication of our list of U.S. manufacturers. We intend to release simultaneously the names of those companies that have made the moral and humanitarian decision to disassociate themselves from mine production. You may be interested to know that Motorola has recently adopted a new policy that we hope will be emulated by all other companies involved in mine production. Motorola has announced that it "will do everything reasonably possible to make sure that Motorola does not knowingly sell any part that is intended for use in an antipersonnel mines."

In order to incorporate any response from your company into our release of the list of U.S. manufacturers, we need to hear from you no later than [date]. Please do not hesititate to contact me, or my colleague Andrew Cooper, if you have any questions. Thank you for your attention to this urgent matter.

Sincerely,

/s/

Stephen Goose

Program Director, Human Rights Watch Arms Project

Chair, USCBL Steering Committee