Photo and article from The Guardian Global Development
Niger delta communities devastated by giant oil
spills from rusting Shell pipelines have unanimously rejected a
compensation offer from the company, calling it an insult, and cruel and
derisory.
A court in London is now likely to decide how much the
Anglo-Dutch firm should pay 11,000 fishermen and others from the Bodo
community who lost their livelihoods when the 50-year-old Shell-operated
trans-Niger pipeline burst twice within a few months in 2008.
Sources
close to the negotiations in Port Harcourt this week suggest Shell
offered the communities £30m, or around £1,100 for each person affected.
Martyn Day, a partner with the UK law firm Leigh Day who represented
the those communities, said Shell's offer was rejected unanimously at a
large public meeting in Bodo.
"The amount offered for most
claimants equated to two to three years' net lost earnings whereas the
Bodo creek has already been out of action for five years and it may well
be another 20-25 before it is up and running properly again. I was not
at all surprised to see the community walk out of the talks once they
heard what Shell were offering."
On Friday the full scale of the
spills could be seen from the air with over 75 sq km of mangrove
forests, creeks, swamps and channels thick with crude oil. Estimates of
how much oil was spilled ranged from around 4,000 barrels to more than
300,000. Communities this week reported that no cleanup had been done
and that water wells were still polluted.
Five years after the
spills the creeks and waterways around Bodo have an apocalyptic feel.
The air stinks of crude, long slicks of oil drift in and out of the
blackened, dying mangrove swamps and a sheen of oil covers the tidal
mudflats.
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