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기사

2011년 10월 3일

저자:
John Vidal, Guardian [UK]

Shell oil paid Nigerian military to put down protests, court documents show

Shell has…resisted charges of complicity in human rights abuses. [However,]…[c]onfidential memos, faxes, witness statements and other documents…show the company regularly paid the military to stop the peaceful protest movement against the pollution, even helping to plan raids on villages suspected of opposing the company. According to Ogoni activists, several thousand people were killed in the 1990s and many more fled that wave of terror that took place in the 1990s…Among the documents was a 1994 letter from Shell agreeing to pay a unit of the Nigerian army to retrieve a truck, an action that left one Ogoni man dead and two wounded. Shell said it was making the payment "as a show of gratitude and motivation for a sustained favourable disposition in future assignments".

다음 타임라인의 일부

Nigeria: Documents show that Shell regularly paid the military to stop protest movement against its operations in the 1990s

Shell lawsuit (re executions in Nigeria, Kiobel v Shell, filed in USA)