King
Emere Godwin Bebe Okpabi of Nigeria's Ogale community said his people had no
option but to seek a ruling in London on pollution claims against Shell ©Adrian
Dennis (AFP)
|
More than 40,000
Nigerians will on Thursday discover if London's High Court can rule on their
pollution claims against Anglo-Dutch oil giant Shell over spills in the Niger
Delta.
AFP
report continues:
Lawyers
for the claimants are demanding action from Shell to clean up spills that have
devastated their communities for decades, but the multinational argues that the
claims should be heard in Nigeria.
The
firm's lawyer Peter Goldsmith told Judge Peter Fraser during a hearing in
November that the cases concerned "fundamentally Nigerian issues",
and shouldn't be heard in London.
However,
Daniel Leader from legal firm Leigh Day, representing the claimants, responded
that the spills had "blighted the lives of the thousands" in the
Ogale and Bille communities.
He
said they had "no choice" other than to seek legal redress in London.
Shell
maintains that the claims are issues of Nigerian common law, customary law and
legislation given that "the events are said to have occurred in Nigeria
and the alleged physical damage is all said to be found in Nigeria".
Goldsmith
also argued that the case involves its Nigerian subsidiary SPDC, which runs a
joint venture with the Nigerian government.
He
claimed that the case was aimed at establishing the High Court's jurisdiction
over SPDC, opening the door for further claims.
A
key issue in the claim will be whether Shell can be held responsible for
failing to protect their pipelines from damage caused by third parties.
- 'Strange diseases' -
Leigh
Day said "it was clear to the claimants that Royal Dutch Shell is
ultimately responsible for failing to ensure that its Nigerian subsidiary
operates without causing environmental devastation.
"At
the moment these communities have no choice -- they have to take them to court
to get them to act," said Leader.
King
Emere Godwin Bebe Okpabi of the Ogale community told AFP in an interview in
November that his people had no option but to seek a ruling in London.
"Shell
is Nigeria and Nigeria is Shell," he said. "You can never, never
defeat Shell in a Nigerian court. The truth is that the Nigerian legal system
is corrupt."
Holding
up a plastic bottle containing contaminated water from his community in
Nigeria, the tribal king said "my people are drinking this water".
"There
are strange diseases in my community -- skin diseases, people are dying sudden
deaths, some people are impotent, low sperm count," he added.
"I
can afford to buy water. But can I afford to buy for everybody? No."
SPDC
claims that the main sources of pollution in Ogale and Bille are "crude
oil theft, pipeline sabotage and illegal refining".
The
first claim is being brought on behalf of 2,335 individuals from the Bille
Kingdom, who are mostly fishermen who claim their environment has been blighted
by oil spills.
The second claim is brought on behalf of the 40,000 members of the Ogale Community, who say they have suffered repeated oil spills since at least 1989.
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