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Shell in Court Over Alleged Role in Nigeria Executions
Family of environmental activist Ken Saro-Wiwa, hanged by his country's rulers in 1995, take oil giant to court in New York
Ken Saro-Wiwa swore that one day Shell, the oil giant, would answer for his death in a court of law. Next month, 14 years after his execution, the Nigerian environmental activist's dying wish is to be fulfilled.
(AFP/File/Karen Bleier) In a New York federal court, Shell and one of its senior executives are to face charges that in the early 1990s in Nigeria they were complicit in human rights abuses, including summary execution and torture.
The Anglo-Dutch company, if found liable, could be forced to pay hundreds of millions of pounds in damages. No multinational has ever been found guilty of human rights abuses, although two previous cases saw major claims settled outside court.
Saro-Wiwa became famous as a campaigner on behalf of the Ogoni people, leading peaceful protests against the environmental damage caused by oil companies in the Niger Delta. There was worldwide condemnation when, along with eight other activists, he was hanged by the Nigerian military government in 1995 after being charged with incitement to murder after the death of four Ogoni elders. Many of the prosecution witnesses later admitted that they had been bribed to give evidence against Saro-Wiwa, who was a respected television writer and businessman.
Lawyers in New York will allege that Shell actively subsidised a campaign of terror by security forces in the Niger Delta and attempted to influence the trial that led to Saro-Wiwa's execution. The lawsuit alleges that the company attempted to bribe two witnesses in his trial to testify against him. Members of Saro-Wiwa's family will take the stand for the first time to give their version of events, among them his brother Owens, who will allege that Brian Anderson, managing director of Shell's Nigerian subsidiary, told him: "It would not be impossible to get charges dropped if protests were called off." Anderson is fighting the action.
Witnesses who were shot by military police in the Niger Delta principally to protect the building of Shell's oil pipeline will allege that Shell, by paying the police to protect its interests, was complicit in acts of violence.
Speaking to the Observer from Abuja, Nigeria, Saro-Wiwa's son, Ken Wiwa, said: "For 14 years we have lived with the memory of a father, an uncle, a brother, a son executed for a crime he didn't commit. We have daily reminders. It's painful to live with a monstrous injustice. To wake up one day to finally get our day in court is tremendously satisfying.
"After the injustice of the original crime against my father, having to watch legal arguments [by Shell] using the highest-paid lawyers in the world is sickening. You can't describe how painful that is to go through.
"Part of the reason for the original protest was the way Shell behaved. Ogoni people made their living farming and fishing, but Shell was using open waste pits and oil pipelines criss-crossed the land. These polluting activities were put on top of a delicate ecosystem. It destroyed people's ability to sustain themselves. That's the impact of Shell and, when people tried to protest, they were brutally repressed."
In a statement, Shell this weekend described the executions of the Ogoni 9 as "tragic events carried out by the Nigerian government in power at the time".
"Shell attempted to persuade that government to grant clemency; to our deep regret, that appeal - and the appeals of many others - went unheard, and we were shocked and saddened when we heard the news. Shell in no way encouraged or advocated any act of violence against them or their fellow Ogonis. We believe that the evidence will show clearly that Shell was not responsible for these tragic events. The allegations made in the complaints against Royal Dutch/Shell concerning the 1995 executions of Ken Saro-Wiwa and his eight fellow Ogonis are false and without merit."
US lawyers have finally won permission to bring the case to court under the alien tort statute, which gives non-US citizens the right to file claims in American courts for international human rights violations. The court case had been set for 27 April, though last night the date was moved to 26 May.
Today the oil-producing Niger Delta region is riven by intense violence and corruption. The Ogoni 9 trial is seen as a way of coming to terms with the past and building a non-violent future.
"We need to know the truth," said Ken Wiwa last night. "We need to have people account for their role in the executions and the displacement of the Ogoni people, many of whom feel traumatised. It will be a relief. It will enable people to face the future. That's the most important thing. Let's account for the past, so we can move forward."
Lawyers representing Saro-Wiwa's family have not sought specific damages should Shell be found liable, but legal experts say the oil giant could face fines running into hundreds of millions of pounds.
Jenny Green, a senior lawyer at the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights, who has played a pivotal role in ensuring the Saro-Wiwa case made it to court, said: "Mosop [the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People] was formed to stand up to multinationals and the dictatorship that acted hand-in-hand. This is a significant moment, because it says you can't act with impunity."
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11 Comments so far
Show AllHey Shell-how does this feel, eh?
They (the corporations) all abuse humans and take their rights. They all do, and everyone who serves a corporation also does. This world of men, as it now operates, is GUILTY GUILTY GUILTY.
Duh.
Nigeria is the perfect example of run amok capitalism and the clearest example that it does NOT create wealth and prosperity.
The wealth is being drained from Nigeria to line the pockets of Shareholders in the Western world, with a few billions left behind as payoffs to corrupt Government officials.
Masses of Nigerians live in utter poverty watching as the lands they live in are despoiled and made un-inhabitable.
Some claim that this a good thing. That a Country should not reward all its citizens equally and that some "invisible hand" called the free market will ensure that those deserved of wealth and security will receive it. The marketplace will be allowed to determine a persons "value".
An absolute crock.
The wealthy "shareholders" of Shell are rich enough this including the Queen of England and her 19 royal palaces. The Oil resources of Nigeria are the common property of the peoples of Nigeria , and not the Oil Multinationals.
Nigeria needs a Chavez to run these bastards out and to keep that oil wealth inside Nigeria to support their own.
It won't happen. MI5, the SAS and the CIA will ensure it does not.
Shell isn't the only multi-national that should be taken to court!
Damn straight. I can think of several others without any trouble at all.
It seems unlikely that a multi-national corporation would actually be found guilty of these crimes, but if they were, they should have their licenses and charters of business revoked, not just fines. They should be dissolved and their chief operating officers barred from engaging in any similar business. No company that commits this kind of crime should be allowed to operate. That's my opinion; but my perception is that governments and corporations have often engaged in illegal activities, including human rights abuses, and few seem to be ever held accountable for their actions. The only way for this to change is for people to stand up and demand that it does, which in turn requires us to stop seeing people and nations as separate entities with no responsibilities or connections to one another. We have to begin to recognize that if something is good for us, but bad for someone else, then it is not really good for us!
Bushites, you're next.
There is also a similar legal action winding its' way through the American courts in regards to Chevron's misdeeds in Nigeria. The legal team that brought John Doe I et al vs. Unocal, which established the legal precedent that corporations could be brought to court to answer for misconduct done on their behalf abroad, is pursuing this case.
The protesters deserve justice but in terms of reigning in the multinationals, courts are ineffective, serving mostly to churn mammon for the elites engaged in litigation rackets.
We progressives on the far left propose something more significant: That all multinational petro-profits reaped in Nigeria be funneled back into basic services, education, healthcare, enforced rights to ownership of resources and production, and other benefits for the Nigerian people.
Wikipedia:
Nigerian population: 140,003,542, most populous in Africa.
"According to the United Nations, Nigeria has been undergoing explosive population growth and one of the highest growth and fertility rates in the world. According to current data, one out of every four Africans is Nigerian. Health, health care, and general living conditions in Nigeria are poor. Life expectancy is 47 years and just over half the population has access to potable water and appropriate sanitation.
Education is also in a state of neglect. After the 1970s oil boom, tertiary education was improved so that it would reach every subregion of Nigeria. Education is provided free by the government, but the attendance rate for secondary education is only 29%. The education system has been described as 'dysfunctional' largely due to decaying institutional infrastructure. 68% of the population is literate."
About damn time.
A court case against a major corporation for human rights abuses? Being held in the U.S.? NEW YORK no less? Ha ha ho ho that's rich! Surely no one has their hopes up about this?