PRESS
RELEASE
Shell Challenged at AGM by Community Activist Shareholders
Tuesday, April 22, 2003, Pietermaritzburg, Durban, Amsterdam,
London: Community and civil society activists representing
groundWork and the SDCEA [1] will be participating as shareholders
at the Royal Dutch Shell AGMs being held concurrently in London
and The Hague tomorrow, April 23, 2003. They will join an international
coalition [2] of civil society organisations calling on Shell
to be held accountable for polluting fence-line communities across
the world.
Tomorrow in London, Desmond D’Sa, who lives not far from
the Shell oil refinery in south Durban, will take his place at
the London Shell AGM as a holder of one share in Royal Dutch Shell.
He will use his position as a shareholder in this powerful multi-national
corporation to raise questions regarding the pollution Shell is
causing in his community. He will be joined by representatives
from communities in the USA, Nigeria and the Philippines who wish
to draw the attention of international Shell shareholders and
management to the environmental and human rights abuses being
perpetrated by local Shell operations.
These community representatives will also present their cases
at an international press conference at 09:30 hrs London time
in the Weatherhead Room, Central Hall, Westminster, London, to
expose Shell’s disastrous environmental record and to launch
a new publication entitled – “Failing the challenge:
The Other Shell Report 2002”. Representatives from the oil
giant Shell is still putting short-term profit before people and
the environment, despite its public commitment to a “green”
future [3], according to “The Other Shell Report”.
This is a counter report to the AGM Chairperson’s report.
Parallel to this, in The Hague, tomorrow, groundWork’s
Ardiel Soeker, will attend Shell’s Dutch AGM representing groundWork,
also a new shareholder in Royal Dutch Shell. He will be joined
by representatives of Milieudefensie (Friends of the Earth, The
Netherlands) who are this week releasing a new report entitled
“Leaking Pipelines – Shell in South Africa”.
This report investigates Shell’s activities in south Durban,
South Africa, where Shell operates the biggest oil refinery in
Southern Africa, adjacent to local black communities. This report
is the third in a series of five reports being produced by Milieudefensie
to monitor Dutch multinationals’ activities abroad. The
series features Dutch companies that do not take their corporate
responsibilities seriously in foreign countries, thereby demonstrating
the need for binding international rules for multi-nationals.
Says Durban’s Desmond D’SA: “In South Durban
multinationals like Shell seem to be above the law. Only citizens
who break the speed limits are prosecuted. Multi-Nationals like
Shell who pollute have never been prosecuted. We in South Durban
call on Shell management to respect the South African constitution”
“Shell will not be allowed to operate in the UK and The Netherlands
as they do in South Africa, polluting local community’s environments
and health. Shell must be held accountable. If we cannot get the
South African government to act, we will ensure that we get the
international community to act against Shell to hold them accountable
and to ensure that the South African government develops laws
to protect its people from such polluters,” states Ardiel
Soeker, Air Quality Project Coordinator for groundWork
.
For more information contact:
Bobby Peek (groundWork, SA): 033 3425662 or 082 4641383
Heeten Kalan (SAEPEJ): 0944 77 3697 9647 Tony
Juniper (Friends of the Earth, EWNI): 0944 20 7490 0336 and 0944
77 1284 3207
Myrthe Verweij (Milieudefensie, Amsterdam): 0931 62 959 3876
“Failing the Challenge - The Other Shell Report 2002” can be
downloaded here
This report will be available at 10:30 hrs on Wednesday on the
website.
“Leaking Pipelines – Shell in South Africa” can be downloaded
from: www.foenl.org
NOTES:
[1] The South Durban Community Environmental Alliance (SDCEA)
is a alliance of 10 civil society groupings in south Durban challenging
polluting industry in residential neighbourhoods
[2] Civil society organisations and their representatives: Desmond
D’Sa, Chairperson of the SDCEA, Durban, South Africa; Hope
Esquillo-Tura, United Front to Oust Oil Depots, from the Philippines;
Oronto Douglas, Friends of the Earth Nigeria; Hilton Kelley, Director
of the Community In-power and Development Association, Port Arthur,
Texas; Margie Richard, Concerned Citizens of Norco, Louisiana,
USA; Judith Robinson, Environmental Health Fund, USA; Denny Larson,
Refinery Reform Campaign Global Community Monitor, USA; Craig
Bennett, Friends of the Earth (EWNI); Myrthe Verweij, Milieudefensie;
Heeten Kalan, the South African Exchange Programme on Environmental
Justice.
[3] The company committed itself to “sustainable development”
in 1995.
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