'Devastated Lives': Shell Sued Again over Catastrophic Spills in Nigeria
Royal Dutch Shell must pay for the lives and livelihoods destroyed by the decades-long deluge of oil spilled from its pipelines in the Niger Delta, two lawsuits filed in London on Tuesday charged.
“Shell has an appalling record of obfuscation and misinformation with regard to its dealings in the Niger Delta,” said Peter Frankental, director of Amnesty International’s UK Economic Affairs Programme.
Shell’s pipelines traverse the fragile Niger Delta ecosystem—and humanitarian groups last year drew attention to the company’s decades-long efforts to cover up, rather than fix, its myriad pipeline failures.
The two latest cases were filed on behalf of the Bille and Ogale communities in the Ogoniland region. The British firm behind the lawsuits, Leigh Day, charged that Shell’s pipeline infrastructure is in such bad shape that continual oil spills “caused, and continue to cause, long-term contamination of the land, swamps, groundwater and waterways” in the Ogale community.
It also claimed that pipeline breakages have destroyed the livelihood of the 13,000 residents of Bille, who traditionally fish to sustain themselves, and that the spills have grown so extensive that residents “have even been forced to stack sandbags outside their homes to try to prevent oil entering their properties.”
Click Here: Atlanta United FC Jersey
This week’s lawsuits follow an unprecedented £55 million ($77.4 million) settlement paid out by Shell in 2015 to residents of the region’s Bodo community for spills that happened in 2008.
SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT