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Shell Declines to Pay Nigeria Damages Pending Appeal
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=1253DE1:3919ACA Multinational oil
company set to defy Nigerian court-ordered deadline to pay $1.5
billion in compensation damages to local communities in Niger Delta



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An oil installation belonging to Shell Petroleum Development Company
in Odidi, Niger Delta area of Nigeria, Feb. 2006Multinational oil
company Shell, is set to defy a Nigerian court-ordered deadline to pay
$1.5 billionĀ  in compensation damages to local communities in the
Niger Delta. Shell's decision not to pay the damages pending an appeal
is likely to incense militants who have attacked oil-and-gas
facilities in the past six months.

Shell says it will wait for a decision on its appeal before
considering a court order to pay $1.5 billion in compensation damages
to ethnic-Ijaw communities in the Niger Delta.

A federal high court in the oil city of Port Harcourt last Friday
ordered Shell to pay the money by Monday. The money is to be deposited
into an escrow account with the Central Bank of Nigeria.

Environmental activist and lawyer, Oronto Douglas, says it is in
Shell's interest to comply with the court order.





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An unidentified youth hangs his wash on a line at the back of his
house near a gas flare belonging to Shell Petroleum Development
Company in Odidi"The attitude and conduct of those who had taken them
to court is in accordance with the rule of law," he said. "Because if
they had gone the other way of militancy in trying to attack and
demand for what they want, probably Shell may lose more than what they
are supposed to pay. So, I think that essentially, they should go into
immediate dialogue with the Ijaw aborigines of Bayelsa and come to
some agreement as to the method they are going to adopt in paying the
judgment debt."

Militant groups, led by the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger
Delta, or MEND, have attacked oil-and-gas facilities in the delta
during the past six months that have cut about a quarter of Nigeria's
daily oil output.

Most of the attacked facilities belong to Shell.

Douglas says Shell's refusal to pay could expose it to more attacks.

"I am aware that one or two groups have called on Shell to pay," he
said. "MENDS for example, issued a statement that Shell should obey
the judgment of the court and pay. So, it a matter of conjuncture to
think that it can inflame passion, that such an international
corporate organ will not want to respect the rule of law in a country
because it is in the third world.''

Ethnic-Ijaw communities dominate the delta, an impoverished region
with a population of about 20 million.

The local communities have long accused Shell, the biggest Western oil
company operating in Nigeria, of responsibility for oil spills that
have polluted waters and killed vegetation and fish in the area.







Local youths walk on oil pipeline belonging to the Shell Oil company
in NigeriaShell has rejected the charge and said vandals who break
pipelines to steal oil that they later sell have caused most spills in
the region.