* Fund criticises working conditions at Hansae Co
* Companies say taking steps to improve conditions
* Fund barred from investing in firms breaking ethics code
(Adds comments from companies and the fund, bullets,
background)
OSLO, June 29 (Reuters) - Norway's $965 billion sovereign
wealth fund has put under observation South Korea's Hansae Yes24
Holdings 016450.KS and its garment manufacturing unit Hansae
105630.KS over possible human rights violations, the central
bank said on Thursday.
Under the fund's operating guidelines, it could sell
holdings in firms that do not meet its ethnical code.
At the end of 2016, the fund had a 1.29 percent stake worth
$11 million in Hansae Co Ltd, which manufactures garments in
Vietnam and several other countries. It also owned a 1.52
percent stake worth $5.2 million in its parent Hansae Yes24.
"The companies are placed under observation because of an
unacceptable risk that the companies contribute to, or are
responsible for, systematic violations of human rights," the
board of the central bank wrote in a statement.
A spokesman for the two firms told Reuters they had
conducted an internal investigation of working conditions at the
Vietnam plant this year that resulted in efforts to improve
working conditions and related issues.
The Norwegian fund is a managed by a unit of the central
bank. The fund's ethics watchdog, the Council on Ethics, makes
recommendations to the central bank's executive board, which
decides whether to act.
The council recommended a prompt exclusion of the two firms
from the portfolio, but the board of the central bank decided to
put the stakes under observation.
"The Council on Ethics highlights that the companies have
taken measures to improve the working conditions. The Executive
Board believes that these measures provide sufficient grounds to
observe the development in the future," the bank said.
Norway's sovereign wealth fund holds stakes in almost 9,000
companies in 77 countries.
Ethics guidelines prevent the fund investing in makers of
nuclear weapons, cluster bombs and tobacco, among other things.
The guidelines also bar investment in firms deemed to be
violating human rights or damaging the environment.
(Reporting by Terje Solsvik in Oslo, additional reporting by
Heekyong Yang in Seoul; Editing by Gwladys Fouche)
((terje.solsvik@thomsonreuters.com; +47 918 666 70; Reuters
Messaging: terje.solsvik.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))
Keywords: NORWAY SWF/SOUTHKOREA