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When Big Business and Human Rights Collide
A case before the U.S. Supreme Court may deny victims abroad recourse against corporate-sanctioned abuse.
Among the thousands of interviews I've conducted as a human rights investigator over the last 24 years, one of the most difficult was in 1996, outside a refugee camp along the Thai-Burma border. I was no stranger to suffering in my country. I had fled from Burma (also known as Myanmar) just a few years before, escaping the brutal military regime after being arrested and tortured. I had gone to the camp to investigate reports that villages were being uprooted and brutalized to make way for a natural gas pipeline built by U.S. oil giant Unocal and other multinational corporations. There, I met a young mother from my Karen ethnic group whose baby had recently been killed by Burmese troops providing security for the pipeline.
A protestor during a demonstration at the Unocal Terminal Motor Transport facility in Los Angeles is seen on Dec. 12, 1996 holding aloft a photo of a resident of Burma reportedly injured by a landmine explosion. Other protestors chained themselves to a Unocal tanker truck. The demonstration's intent was to protest Unocal's involvement in a Burmese pipeline project, which activists claimed led to human rights abuses and destruction of the Burmese rainforest. (Leane Johnstone/Earth Action Team/AP Photo) That was Jane Doe, as she would later be known. She would go on to help establish the legal principle that U.S. corporations can be held liable for complicity in severe human rights abuses abroad. Now, a case being argued before theU.S. Supreme Courton Tuesday may mean that future Jane Does will have no such recourse against corporations.
Jane Doe 1 was a poor farmer whose great misfortune was that she was living in the path of the project when Unocal — now owned by Chevron — and its French and Thai corporate partners began building the pipeline. Their other partner was the Burmese military regime, and the corporations contracted with its army, despite its abhorrent human rights record, to provide security for the project.
The soldiers forced thousands of villagers to provide slave labor for the project. One of those villagers was Jane Doe's husband. As Jane Doe told me in the camp, the military forced her husband at gunpoint to clear the jungle and carry heavy loads. When he escaped, the soldiers came looking for him. They found Jane Doe instead, nursing her baby near a cooking fire. She told them she didn't know where her husband was. The soldiers beat her into unconsciousness and kicked her and her baby into the fire. Jane Doe recovered from her injuries; her baby died.
I remember trying to comfort her and thinking: How is it possible that foreign companies can come into Burma, hire a rogue army, make billions of dollars and have no responsibility for what their business partners do? There have been positive changes in Burma recently, but at that time, justice was impossible; the courts served the military. But Unocal was a U.S. company, and I had met American lawyers who believed that U.S. corporations were not above human rights laws.
And so, in 1996, Jane Doe 1 became a lead plaintiff in Doe vs. Unocal, a lawsuit filed in Los Angeles, where Unocal had its headquarters. The case was based on the U.S. Alien Tort Statute of 1789, which allows non-U.S. citizens to file lawsuits in the U.S. for violations of international law. Jane Doe's case was the first to apply that law to corporations accused of liability in human rights violations. In 2005, Unocal agreed to a settlement. The case has provided an underpinning for similar claims against corporations headquartered in the U.S. or doing business in the U.S., and thus it has helped victims of crimes against humanity gain some justice.
For example, in 2007 Yahoo agreed to compensate the families of two Chinese dissidents imprisoned after the Internet company provided their identifying information to the Chinese government, and in 2010 the military contractor Blackwater compensated the families of several Iraqi men allegedly killed by Blackwater guards.
But now, the use of the Alien Tort Statute in cases of alleged corporate liability in human rights cases has come under attack from big business. On Tuesday, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in Kiobel vs. Royal Dutch Petroleum. The plaintiffs are Nigerians who suffered abuse under a brutal military dictatorship in the mid-1990s; they sued Royal Dutch Petroleum, better known as Shell, over its alleged support of this violence. Shell is arguing that corporations are not responsible for human rights abuses under such circumstances; that individual employees who are complicit in torture, summary executions and other crimes against humanity can be held liable, but not corporations. An appeals court decided that international law, which is considered under the Alien Tort Statute, backed up that claim.
That decision misreads international law, which does not shield corporations from responsibility, and is a major setback for human rights cases based on Doe vs. Unocal. The justices will consider whether the U.S. will become a haven for companies that are allegedly complicit in the most heinous crimes or whether it will continue to provide a legal forum for accountability and justice.
The hardest part of my job is talking to the victims and survivors of human rights abuses. The only thing that I could offer to Jane Doe was hope — hope that the perpetrators, including the corporations that enable and profit from such crimes, would be punished so that future abuses could be deterred; hope that by suing, she could prevent other mothers from losing a child.
In 1996, we didn't know what the outcome of our case would be. One of my proudest moments was telling Jane Doe that the U.S. courts would hear her case; that a poor woman from Burma would have a fair shot against a powerful American oil company. She and I knew that our lawsuit against Unocal would not bring her baby back. But we also knew that enforcing the law against corporations would mean such abuses might be prevented in the future. Never again, we thought, would a company think it could get away with murder.
The hardest thing I'll ever have to do is tell her we were wrong.
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22 Comments so far
Show AllAnother utterly disgusting piece of crap we are forced to swallow.
In the USA, corporations are people, except when they aren't. The deciding factor at the Supreme Court: Which framework is better for promoting corporate looting?
Spit it out in their faces!
As long as corporations can "settle" with money, keep the actual events hidden, often not admit wrongdoing and even forbid the parties in the settlement to talk about what actually happened, this is just a cost of doing business. Better than nothing I guess, but not really a huge step towards justice. As soon as a corporate charter is revoked, a company destroyed and its leaders made personally and retroactively responsible for the harm their decisions caused (which would in a lot of case probably mean long prison sentences and even the death penalty), there's progress. Civil suits where the most you can lose is money are a perfect fit for corporations. The point is that not everything can be a cost of doing business - some things are crimes and so people (and of course the organisations that are above people) have to be held criminally responsible. Shit like paying a settlement but not admitting wrongdoing, or prohibiting people from talking about the terms of a settlement and even the case in general should not be allowed.
Very true. I hear you. It's so easy for mega corporations just to wear an individual down to the point of settlement. The courts should step up and take settlements off the table, if there were real justice.
Day after day we see that the courts are complicit in maintaining the system that has empowered them and if, on occasion, a judge loses sight of that fact, s/he'd better look out, as witnessed by what has happened to Judge Garzon.
You really can't take on Henry Kissinger or the torture at Gitmo if you want to retain your job.
there is no legal system
watching the bankster terrorists chew up and spit the world out for their profits and bonuses ought to be enough proof of that
and when they are guilty of something they get their blow boys in congress to re-write the laws retroactively
the banking scam of bundling up worthless mortgages into triple a investment vehicles was rife with criminality yet no one has been charged
the state attorneys general are being forced by obama to accept a 26 billion dollar settlement for the 25 trillion dollar housing scam even as we speak
people would be well advised to learn about maritime law - which rules our court system
in maritime law a corporation is in fact called a person
"In most developed nations, maritime law is governed by a separate code and is a separate jurisdiction from national laws. The United Nations, through the International Maritime Organization, has issued numerous conventions that can be enforced by the navies and coast guards that have signed the treaty outlining these rules. Maritime law governs many of the insurance claims relating to ships and cargo, civil matters between shipowners, seamen and passengers, and piracy.
Read more: http://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/maritime-law.asp#ixzz1nVVdYmU0
it is also called admiralty law and is enslaves you from the moment of your birth
"when you came down your mother's Birth Canal you came out of her Water, making YOU a Maritime Admiralty PRODUCT. That is right you became a PRODUCT of Commerce at the time of your Birth. Your mother also needs to sign your Birth Certificate, if you notice on your Birth Certificate where your mother signed, she is not listed as parent, nor is she listed as mother. Where your mother signed your Birth Certificate she is known as Informant!"
"What are these numbers on the back of my Social security card?
These numbers which appear in Red on the back of your Social Security Card represent your body. Your body is bought and sold on Stock Markets, the Numbers In Red on the back of the card is the Serial Number of your Stock. Poor people are considered Common Stock and the Wealthy is known as Preferred Stock.
Just like any other Stock, your body is traded on open markets though the use of your Birth Certificate. If you could see your Original Certificate Of Birth, you would see on the back of the Certificate marks from Banks from all over the globe. World Banks trade your body just as they do every other Commodity. This is because you are Stock in a Maritime Admiralty Banking Scheme where you are used to return profits to the Bank."
"Whenever there is a case heard in a Court somebody is going to pay. That is right the Queen Of England gets a cut from the energy, time, and labor of the American People.
You are Property of the Queen of England as part of a Corporation whose name is the UNITED STATES. The President of this Corporation is also known as President Of The United States. "
http://reality-bytes.hubpages.com/hub/Do-We-Live-Under-Maritime-Law
you go to court because you have been "charged" - you have been charged money by the queen and the court who represents her wants to be paid
this is why corporations often get to pay a fine for their various indiscretions. they have been "charged" and the queen has been "paid" case closed
justice doesn't figure in this process
its about the queen getting paid
"On the day of February 21, 1871 with the Forty-First Congress in session an Act was passed*. The title was "An Act To Provide A Government for the District of Columbia" also known as the "Act of 1871."
(*note: the united states was bankrupt after the civil war and this act - underwritten by the rothschilds refinanced amerika, at great cost don't you think considering that we have been paying ever since)
"The Act formed the Corporation known as THE UNITED STATES. It is the capitalization that is important. This Corporation which was owned by Foreign Entities immediately did away with the original Constitution.
The Act of 1871 changed our Constitution. The title was Capitalized and the word "for" was changed to the word "OF" in the title.
"The Constitution for the united states of America" was written by the Founding Fathers. The international bankers had it changed to "THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA". "
"The government that was formed was a Corporation. This new and improved Constitution is not a document for America. It is a Constitution for the Corporation."
this should help folks get their minds around that nagging question "how in the hell do the corporations get away with all that
it is not justice but it is the law....
I disagree in that it is NOT the law.
Laws are founded in pure mathematics and are represented throughout the galaxy in the simplest of things such as a teardrop to something as awesome as Hale-Bopp.
The "law" you refer to is and speak so knowledgeably about is an arbitrary system of injustice that punishes those it should protect and protects those it should punish.
Essentially, not a law, but a man-made invention. I refer you to Newton's "Principia Matematica" or Einsteins paper on relativity.
This is just nitpicking, I basically agree with what you're saying (I interpret it as saying that the way nature works is the only "reality" and human "laws" are just a made-up system - and they aren't even trying to achieve the goal (of a more universal human justice) it's supposed to; my point has more to do with our *knowledge* (and possible knowledge) of natural reality):
Scientific "laws" are also man-made inventions, the term "scientific law" itself reflects an imo somewhat unsophisticated (conventionalist) view of science itself. There are no "scientific laws". There are sets of theories that have not been conclusively "falsified" and replaced with a better set of theories yet (both have to happen, just "falsification" without alternatives is quite meaningless) and that happen to be able to reliably predict events within a certain range of conditions. There are also "metaphysical" "laws", most of the time basically heuristics, that give positive "hints" about which directions research should take - and negative hints in the form of limits on which directions it shouldn't. And there is, most importantly, the social, human background of science (which I think of as socially reliably reproducible and shareable knowledge about external (to humans) reality (what this includes has been continously expanding through history)), the scientific communities, literature, institutions etc, which have to adapt themselves to external truth and adopt methods and tools that make its understanding and sharing (preservation) possible.
In addition to this, science is NOT founded in pure mathematics. Theories are *expressed* in the language of mathematics (mostly very far from pure mathematics too), but they are founded in observed facts (most of the time, a few particularly annoying observed facts that are especially incongruous with the current "state of the art" of the theory) and most importantly, human ingenuity. Sciences are not just deductive, founded on a (historically expanding) set of axioms with laws and theories derived from them using pure logic and mathematics; and they're also not just inductive, generalising from a set of empirical experiences. These are tools (heuristics and metaphysical "laws") that help expand science, but not the only basic methods that do that. What is important is that science is *controlled* (ie. limited and its expansion directed) to a very large extent by reality - but it is not some kind of direct expression of reality. It's a pretty well known example, but Newton acquired his abstract concept of "force" from his dealings in *alchemy* - the test of this concept was not in deduction or induction but in two things: the first was obviously the fact that his model that included this concept (kind of, mostly) worked (it took some time for "facts" to catch up with theory - better measurement methods were required etc); the second, and I think most important factor, was that his approach was incredibly *productive* and scientists understood how they could contribute and expand his theories to cover more and more of reality.
Big business and human rights ALWAYS collide. You can't have both. Choose.
I agree with the previous posts.
This is the most virulent form of "capitalism" one can imagine. One that counts destructive activity as "GDP growth" one that counts imprisoning people as GDP growth; one that counts weapons and mass slaughter as GDP growth, one that externalizes the costs of pollution, explotation and desruction is inherently sociopathic.
When the powers of the state and corporations/banks are amalgamated we can call that a form of totalitarianism. Neo-fascism if you will.
No matter what you call it as long GDP growth is the only goal, it will be deemed as effective and protected and defended against all comers. What exactly is our ""gross" domestic product"? From what I can see it's death and destruction.
Gone are the days when it was tied to actual goods or services.
"When Big Business and Human Rights Collide"
Big business ALWAYS collides with human rights. Humans have consciences, which allow them to experience dignity, or a lack thereof. This fact mandates universal equity/justice. Big business is merely another elite racket, all of which amount to, by far, the most onerous threat to human dignity and happiness. The people do NOT need anything from elites. All elite rackets must be eliminated. The news today is that the people are understanding this in droves, and learning to Occupy their own Minds, and their own destinies, by regaining local ownership/control of industrial production and public policy.
It was not long after UNOCAL's human rights abuses in Burma that they began to push for the TAPI pipeline in Afghanistan, but failed to reach an agreement with the Taliban which had previously been supported by the U.S. in their war against the Russians which was the first step in possibly opening Central Asia for exploitation by Big Oil. At that time Karzai was a "consultant" for UNOCAL.
Here is taste of what a corporation can do.
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Oil_watch/ProfitGunpoint_UnocalBurma.html
"In a series of interviews with Maung, founder of the exiled Federation of Trade Unions of Burma, the villagers described armed military men expelling indigenous fishermen from their homes and farmers from their land' razing villages and enslaving their inhabitants. They reported that soldiers forced everyone from children to the elderly into labor, making them cut through thick swaths of jungle, build military installations and haul army equipment. All of this, Maung later learned, in order to prepare the area for a new gas pipeline.
One woman said soldiers came to her home as she was cooking over an open fire. When her husband attempted to flee, they shot him and shoved her and her baby into the flames, killing the baby and leaving her with disabling scars. Others described seeing their neighbors executed when they refused to leave their homes. Many who joined forced-work details collapsed from exhaustion or disease after weeks of toiling under a scorching sun with little food or water. Two girls said they were raped by soldiers at knifepoint.
Many of these victims are now plaintiffs in two landmark lawsuits against Unocal, part of a consortium of companies behind the gas pipeline. The outcomes may well determine whether American corporations will ever be forced to account for the brutal human rights abuses being committed around the world in their interests."
Not only should corporations be prosecuted, but corporate decision makers should be tried as well. If CEO's might face a death sentence they might think twice about engaging in crimes against humanity.
And at the present time, American forces are killing innocent people in Afghanistan in an effort to make way for pipelines and corporate profits.
And in Cheney's secret energy task force meetings, Big Oil decision makers sat down and mapped out who would get what part of Iraq's oil. The White House and Congress and the Pentagon are also responsible for crimes against humanity.
I find it particularly poignant and painful when a non-Amerikan optimistically expresses faith or hope in Amerika's capacity for justice.
"Jane Doe" brings to mind the case of Mohammed Kinani, whose 9-year-old son Ali was the youngest victim in the infamous Nisour Square Massacre.
The gist of the story is that Kinani was the "last man standing" who insisted on taking Blackwater to court; every other plaintiff or potential plaintiff had agreed to settle.
Kinani, as reported by Jeremy Scahill* and "Democracy Now"** in January, 2010, resolutely pursued litigation in Amerikan courts; he was not actually seeking compensation, but a direct admission of responsibility and an apology from Blackwater officials for the heinous slaughter of his beloved son.
Kinani expressed faith and confidence that U.S. courts would afford him the justice he righteously sought. Cynic that I am, I found Kinani's faith in the Amerikan justice system pathetically naïve at best. But I couldn't help rooting for him.
In January, 2012, it was quietly reported*** that Kinani had accepted a "confidential settlement", finally closing the case.
I'm not an attorney, but in my experience the fundamental outcome of "settling" litigation, even assuming the best pragmatic intentions and goodwill by all involved parties, is to make some troublesome dispute or conflict Go Away Forever.
Kinani's settlement might not whitewash the crimes to the full extent of the familiar phrase "no admission of wrongdoing". But I'll bet that at worst, Blackwater was able to get away with a "modified limited hangout".
Although the linked article characterized the litigation as an "undisclosed settlement", it doesn't specify whether the parties individually agreed not to disclose or discuss the full terms of the settlement, or even the matters litigated in the settlement.
However, such post-settlement binding gag orders, and sealing of court records, are a standard feature of settlements, in accordance with the mutual "Go Away Forever" principle.
And I haven't come across any reports of Kinani discussing the settlement, e.g. a follow-up report by Scahill or "Democracy Now".
Based on the available information, it appears that Kinani was eventually forced to accept exactly the kind of "deal" he hoped to transcend. I think it unlikely that Kinani got the admissions and apology he so patiently fought for, and so richly deserved.
I expected as much, but having my cynicism validated or vindicated is no pleasure.
The bitter truth is that in the modern Amerikan Imperium, if one is lucky one might still get one's "day in court". But justice is a luxury a capitalist authoritarian government just can't afford.
I sympathize with well-meaning people like Ka Hsaw Wa, who are compelled to succor victims with as much encouragement and optimism as they can muster, and perpetually hope against hope.
_______________________
* http://www.thenation.com/article/blackwaters-youngest-victim
** http://www.democracynow.org/2010/1/29/exclusiveblackwaters_youngest_victim_father_of_9
*** http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2012/01/07-2
Although the odds seem long, I'm not sure what else we should expect Mr. White Elephant to do. (Ka Hsaw Wa is an assumed name to protect him from Burmese government retribution. It means "White Elephant" in Burmese. Why "White Elephant"? Read here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ka_Hsaw_Wa )
The way I see it, he is doing everything he can to move justice along. What would be useful for him is if he were joined by some USAns. His cause would then receive a boost, no?
Perhaps we could write letters to the editor of our local newspapers, or make our friends aware, or, yes, write our US Congresspeople, such as they are. These actions make a difference, as would whatever small contribution we could afford to his cause.
People who are oppressed can't give up on justice, because they have no option. It's all very well to sympathize, but let's join them, and commit to some kind of action, however small, however much we don't think it will amount to anything. It is thousands of shoulder pushing against the wheel that will make it turn, no?
Big busines and human rights collide! Yeah, when haven't they? Can we count them on maybe one hand?
"I find it particularly poignant and painful when a non-Amerikan optimistically expresses faith or hope in Amerika's capacity for justice."
Actually it's illustrative of the fact that they've bought our propaganda. They truly believe we stand for freedom, justice and democracy when in truth the sole role of American Government today to protect "capitalism"/markets and corporate interests.
Perhaps there is a different discourse to perceive other than "these poor foreigners, they bought the storyline".
This view dumbs down the people of other places, and relegates them to hapless, uninformed victims. They're just not as wise as us sophisticated Westerner progressive types. (... who know that resistance is futile?)
I don't put much stock in this way of thinking, and I think that many who have experienced resistance workers in other countries would agree. Ka Hsaw Wa and his kind are anything but naive about the influence of corporate power in US politics. I think his experiences with victims of Unocal and mention of Chinese victims of Yahoo, and Iraqi victims of Blackwater, make that clear. What they have, and what others may lack, is the gumption to actively oppose that power. Yes, in the face of many discouragements and loss of loved ones, they have hope that things will change. They are aware there will be difficulties, but they actively work to make that change happen. Can we say the same?
Shall these artificial entities supercede and exterminate (or enslave) natural entities? That is the question. The Robber's Court seems to be against humanity.
It would depend on how one defines humanity. It should be clear to us all now that 99% of us are not now considered "human" and not entitled to any "humane" treatment. In today's world money equals "speech" and only those with money are considered worthy of consideration.
According to President Obama there's no "silver bullet" to control these monsters. I don't think "crosses" or "crucifixes" ward them off either. At least I've seen no signs that these self proclaimed religious leaders have had any impact.