Court Orders Shell To Pay Nigerian Farmers Over Oil Spills
A Dutch
court on Friday ordered oil giant Shell to pay compensation in a case brought
by four Nigerian farmers who alleged widespread pollution on their land.
After 13 years
of legal wrangling, an appeals court in The Hague ruled that Shell’s Nigerian
branch must pay for damage caused by oil spills.
It also held
the Anglo-Dutch parent company Royal Dutch Shell liable for installing new
pipeline equipment to prevent further devastating spills in the Niger Delta
region.
“Shell
Nigeria is sentenced to compensate farmers for damages,” the court said.
The amount
of damages would be determined later, it said. It did not specify how many of
the four farmers would receive compensation.
The farmers
first sued Shell in 2008 over pollution in their villages Goi, Oruma and Ikot
Ada Udo, in southeastern Nigeria, in a case backed by the Netherlands arm of
environment group Friends of the Earth.
“In the
Uruma cases Shell Nigeria and Royal Dutch Shell are ordered to equip the
pipeline with a leak detection system so that environmental damage can be
limited in the future,” the court said.
Shell
Nigeria should have shut down oil supplies on the day of the spill in the cases
in Goi, it said.
AFP
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