Business Day

UK court bars Nigeria Shell claims

• Case brought by more than 40,000 delta residents over decades of alleged oil spills blocked due to London court’s lack of jurisdicti­on

- Agency Staff London

A British court has blocked pollution claims against AngloDutch energy company Shell by more than 40,000 Niger Delta residents demanding action over decades of oil spills.

Members of the Ogale and Bille communitie­s had applied for the case to be heard in Britain, arguing they could not get justice in Nigeria.

But on Thursday, the High Court in London said it did not have jurisdicti­on in the case.

“Our community is disappoint­ed, but not discourage­d by this judgment,” King Emere Godwin Bebe Okpabi, ruler of the Ogale Community, said.

“This decision has to be appealed, not just for Ogale, but for many other people in the Niger Delta who will be shut out if this decision is allowed to stand. Shell is simply being asked to clean up its oil and to compensate the communitie­s it has devastated,” he said.

The firm’s lawyer, Peter Goldsmith, told Judge Peter Fraser during a hearing in November that the cases concerned “fundamenta­lly Nigerian issues”, and should not be heard in London.

However, Daniel Leader from legal firm Leigh Day, representi­ng the claimants, responded that the spills had “blighted the lives of … thousands”. He said they had “no choice” other than to seek legal redress in London.

Goldsmith also argued that the case involved Shell’s Nigerian subsidiary SPDC, which runs a joint venture with the Nigerian government.

The lawyer claimed that the case was aimed at establishi­ng the high court’s jurisdicti­on over SPDC, opening the door for further claims.

Leigh Day had argued that Shell was “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,” Leader said earlier.

Okpabi told AFP in an interview in November: “Shell is Nigeria and Nigeria is Shell.”

“You can never, never defeat Shell in a Nigerian court. The truth is that the Nigerian legal system is corrupt,” he claimed.

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.”

SPDC claims the main sources of pollution in Ogale and Bille are “crude oil theft, pipeline sabotage and illegal refining”.

The first claim was 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 was brought on behalf of the 40,000 members of the Ogale community, who say they have suffered repeated oil spills since at least 1989.

‘YOU CAN NEVER … DEFEAT SHELL IN A NIGERIAN COURT. THE TRUTH IS THAT THE NIGERIAN LEGAL SYSTEM IS CORRUPT’

 ?? /AFP Photo ?? Seeking justice: Nigerian tribal king Emere Godwin Bebe Okpabi, seen in this 2016 file picture in London, says his community is disappoint­ed at their case against Shell having been blocked by the High Court in London.
/AFP Photo Seeking justice: Nigerian tribal king Emere Godwin Bebe Okpabi, seen in this 2016 file picture in London, says his community is disappoint­ed at their case against Shell having been blocked by the High Court in London.

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