Shell's dirty PR war
By Dara MacNeil
When confronted with evidence of its complicity in the `legal
murder' of Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight other Ogoni activists in
Nigeria, multinational giant Shell Oil feigned ignorance and
summoned the PR consultants.
The multi-billion dollar corporation launched an expensive,
worldwide campaign to convince people of its innocence in the
whole sordid affair. But unfortunately for Shell, just as their
pleas reached a crescendo, out of hiding came the late Ken
Saro-Wiwa's brother. He explained that Shell had offered to
intervene on his imprisoned brother's behalf if the latter could
be persuaded to call off his campaign against the corporation.
As head of MOSOP - Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People
- Ken Saro-Wiwa had fronted an effective struggle to force Shell
to pay compensation for the environmental havoc they had wreaked
in Ogoniland, in southeastern Nigeria. Since the discovery of oil
in the territory in the 1960s, the region's inhabitants have been
systematically impoverished by the corporation's non-observance
of environmental standards. In addition, MOSOP was seeking
royalty payments for the Ogoni people, based on the $40 billion
worth of oil Shell had extracted from their land.
MOSOP's campaign had proved so effective that it forced Shell to
abandon Ogoniland in 1993. The company has been seeking an
opportunity to return ever since.
By way of retribution, the Nigerian regime imprisoned Saro-Wiwa
and eight other Ogoni activists on patently-trumped up charges.
On 10 November 1995, all nine were executed.
Since then, Shell has been relying heavily on PR to manufacture a
more caring, cosy image of the corporation. However, just as with
their earlier attempts at rehabilitation, it is little more than
a sham.
Earlier this year, Environment Rights Action published its own
assessment of Shell's repeated, heartfelt promises to clean up
its act in Nigeria. The report - Shell in Nigeria: Public
Relations and Broken Promises - concludes that the company is
engaged in little more than sophisticated perception management.
Outright lies, is perhaps a better term.
Thus, the report finds that Shell claims of involvement in
community projects and financing of community infrastructure
development (hospitals, schools etc.) have ``been tailored to
public relations concerns.'' It cites the example of one community
for which Shell claimed to have constructed a town hall and
market. Not so. The authors point out that both were on the verge
of completion when the company stepped in, adopted the project
and erected its own logo over the area, thereby claiming credit
where none was due.
other example cited is that of a community where Shell
operations - far from enhancing the inhabitant's quality of life
- actually destroyed the local hospital. Six years on, no new
building has replaced it.
In addition, a MOSOP leader who visited Ogoniland earlier this
year has passed on his testimony to Irish aid agency Trocaire.
He details how Shell are attempting to bribe and cajole (the army
does the rest) residents of Ogoniland into declaring publicly
that they want Shell to return to the territory. Shell would then
use such declarations as proof to convince a sceptical world.
As the MOSOP leader explains: ``Shell was intensifying its efforts
in bribing and coercing Ogoni people into supporting its return
to Ogoniland. So bizarre are their recent tactics that the
payment of compensation for (recent) spillages was made
conditional upon the litigant producing a passport photo of
himself and being caught on video supporting Shell's return.''
Israel's empty housing policy
People have died as a direct result of Israeli Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu's decision to proceed with the Har Homah
settlement, on Palestinian land in East Jerusalem. Netanyahu, in
defence of this pointed insult to the Palestinian people, has
claimed the settlement is necessary in order to solve a housing
crisis in the area. But it appears the Israeli Prime Minister is,
as people in his position are wont to do, being economical with
the truth.
Earlier this month, a US study showed that more than 25% of all
homes within the controversial settlements are, in fact, empty.
The study - apparently compiled with the help of satellite data -
showed that 26% of the housing units in the West Bank stood
vacant, while 28% of those located on the Golan Heights and 56%
of those in Gaza were also mysteriously bereft of occupants.
Meanwhile, Dedi Zucker of the Israeli opposition party Meretz has
revealed that Israel has confiscated 7,500 acres of Palestinian
land this year alone, in its drive to further expand the
settlement programme.