Bebe Okpabi, leader of Nigeria's Ogale People Making a Case with Bottles of Contaminated Water
Bebe Okpabi, leader of Nigeria’s Ogale People Making a Case with Bottles of Contaminated Water

Rasaq AbdulKareem/

Royal Dutch Shell has been dragged to a London court over alleged activities endangering thousands of lives in a Nigerian community.

A report on Aljazeera says Britain’s High Court began hearing lawsuits on Tuesday filed by the Ogale and Bille people alleging that decades of oil spills have fouled the water and destroyed the lives of thousands of fishermen and farmers in the Niger River Delta, where a Shell subsidiary has operated since the 1950s.

According to lawyers standing for the over 40, 000 Nigerians, who are demanding action from Shell to clean up oil spills, the activities of the oil prospecting firm has contaminated drinking water in local communities with cancer-causing compounds such as benzene.

The UN stated in a 2011 report that at least in 10 Ogoniland communities, public health was “seriously threatened” by drinking water contaminated with hydrocarbons.

In one area, the water contained the carcinogen benzene at levels 900 times higher than what the World Health Organisation says is safe.

A Warning Signal in One of the Communities
A Warning Signal in One of the Communities

While the report recognised that oil production in the region had ceased, it criticised Shell’s oversight of the remaining facilities.

Emere Godwin Bebe Okpabi, leader of Nigeria’s Ogale people, displayed yesterday four bottles of water from his homeland to show why his subjects sued Royal Dutch Shell.

According to reports, they brought their fight to Shell’s home base claiming that Nigerian courts are too corrupt.

“Let the shareholders of Shell who are residents of the advanced world, like Britain, let them see a representative of a kingdom that is being destroyed for them to have money,” Okpabi also told The Associated Press news agency on the eve of the hearing. “That’s blood money.”

The Anglo-Dutch oil giant is arguing that the case should be heard in Nigeria, because it involves its Nigerian subsidiary SPDC, which runs a joint venture with the government and Nigerian plaintiffs.

London law firm Leigh Day is handling the cases after it won a landmark agreement from Shell to pay $83.5m in compensation to the Bodo community for damage caused by oil spills in 2008 and 2009.

Shell originally offered $50,000 before the Bodo took their case to the same UK court.

The new lawsuits were brought by two communities located in Ogoniland, part of the oil-rich southern Niger River Delta.

They want to hold Shell, incorporated in the UK, responsible for the actions of its Nigerian subsidiary, Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Ltd, or SPDC.

The subsidiary said it had produced no oil or gas in the region since 1993.

The area is heavily affected by crude oil theft, pipeline sabotage and illegal refining.

It is arguing in court that the legal challenge is speculative and full of “legal and evidential weaknesses”.

SPDC said it would challenge the jurisdiction of the UK courts in this case because it concerns Nigerian plaintiffs in dispute with a Nigerian company over issues in Nigeria.

“If the Claimants’ lawyers are correct as to the existence of this novel duty of care, [Shell] and many other parents of multinational groups will be liable to the many hundreds of millions of people around the world with whom their subsidiaries come into contact in the ordinary course of their various operations,” the company said in its court argument.

“That would constitute a radical if not historic expansion of the law and open the floodgates to litigation on an unprecedented scale.”

The Ogale and Bille communities account for only a small portion of the millions of Nigerians that human rights activists say have been injured by contamination they say would never have been allowed in the home countries of the multinational oil companies that operate in partnership with the Nigerian government.

Shell was the first oil company to operate in Nigeria, starting production in 1958.

In the 1990s, the military government sent armed troops to put down protests by the Ogoni people, turning the oil-producing south into a war zone.

One of the leaders of those protests was Ken Saro-Wiwa, a writer and environmental activist whose opposition helped stop Shell’s production in Ogoniland.

He and eight others were hanged by the government of military dictator Sani Abacha in November 1995 in a case the US condemned.

President Muhammadu Buhari has promised a clean-up of Ogoniland, which was supposed to start in June but has been delayed.

The new lawsuits come at a time when Shell is pivoting towards other areas, such as Brazil.

It recently bought BG Group Plc for $52.4bn, increasing its proven reserves of oil and gas by 25 per cent. And like other oil companies, it is also slashing jobs and postponing investments to adjust to lower oil prices.

But Shell is still seen as having deep pockets, said David Elmes, course director of the Warwick Business School’s Global Energy Research Network.

 

Source:

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/11/shell-sued-uk-decades-oil-spills-nigeria-161122193545741.html

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By Dipo

Dipo Kehinde is an accomplished Nigerian journalist, artist, and designer with over 34 years experience. More info on: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dipo-kehinde-8aa98926

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