The widow of a Nigerian activist Esther Kiobel is planning to sue Royal Dutch Shell
in the Dutch courts alleging the oil company was complicit in the
execution of her husband by the Nigerian military in 1995, court
documents filed in the United States last week show.
Esther
Kiobel's husband, Barinem Kiobel (pictured right) was a prominent member of
government who opposed the devastation wrought by Shell Oil and opposed
the violence being committed against the opposition.
In 1994, he was
arrested along with Ken Saro-Wiwa and seven other leaders of Movement
for the Survival of the Ogono People, MOSOP. They were tortured for a
year and then executed. Their bodies were dumped in unmarked graves in a
Port Harcourt cemetery. Esther fled Nigeria, applied successfully for
asylum status in the United States.
Esther Kiobel
has filed an application in New York to secure documents from Shell’s
U.S. lawyers, which she could use in the Dutch action The filings
with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District Court of New
York said she planned to begin that action before the end of the year.
"Ms.
Kiobel will demonstrate that Shell encouraged, facilitated, and
conspired with the Nigerian government to commit human rights violations
against the Ogoni people,” a memorandum in the application filed last
week said.
A Shell spokesman said on Sunday: “Shell remains firmly
committed to supporting fundamental human rights in line with the
legitimate role of business. We have always denied, in the strongest
possible terms, the allegations made by the plaintiffs in this tragic
case."
In
2009 prior to that ruling Shell had agreed in the United States to pay
US$15.5 million to settle lawsuits related to other activists executed
at the same time as Barinem Kiobel, including author and environmental
activist Ken Saro-Wiwa.
Kiobel’s lawyer did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Sunday.
John
Donovan, who runs the royaldutchshellplc.com protest website, and who
has advised Kiobel on the case said: "She’s going after Shell in their
home country, the Netherlands".
The Nigerian military cracked down
heavily on local opposition to oil production by a Shell joint venture
in the Niger Delta in the early 1990s. Kiobel alleges that Shell
provided support to the military in its crackdown.
A Dutch court
ruled in December that Shell may be sued in the Netherlands for oil
spills at its subsidiary in Nigeria, although it did not say Shell was
responsible.
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