Tell Shell's CEO -- Stop
profiting
profiting
from human rights abuse.
Own up and pay up for the
devastation in Nigeria.
Emmanuel Kuru's livelihood was destroyed.
In August 2008, the Shell Oil pipeline that ran through his property in the Niger Delta burst, smothering everything in its path with crude oil. His life as a fisherman and a farmer was wrecked.
"The land is wasted. Oil kills everything. We are stranded."
Shell's oil spill took away Emmanuel's livelihood, his drinking water, the economic value of his land -- his very way of life.
His neighbors, and tens of thousands of people living along the Niger Delta, have suffered the same devastating fate caused by oil spill after oil spill. While the Niger Delta has been awash in pollution, Shell has been swimming in profits -- $30.9 billion globally in 2011.
Tell Shell -- Own up. Pay up. Clean up. Make this message loud, clear and inescapable -- add your name to Amnesty's petition demanding justice for Emmanuel and the people harmed by Shell in the Niger Delta.
Ahead of Shell's Annual General Meeting this May, Amnesty will deliver the signatures of hundreds of thousands of activists from around the world in an unsparing public message to CEO Peter Voser and Shell shareholders.
Oil spills are endemic in the Niger Delta, and Shell is the biggest culprit. Why does the oil giant refuse to come clean about its spills in Nigeria? Just yesterday, Amnesty International and the Nigerian NGO, the Centre for Environment, Human Rights and Development, released new analysis showing that at least 103,000 barrels of oil were spilled over 72 days in Emmanuel's town of Bodo -- more than 60 times the volume that Shell repeatedly has claimed leaked.
But thanks to activists like you, corporations like Shell can't hide their human rights abuses anymore. Amnesty International is calling Shell out in a big way, urging the company to make a clear and public commitment to contribute $1 billion as an initial payment to an independent clean-up fund.
People like Emmanuel deserve justice: a full clean-up, real reparations and a beginning to an end to their nightmare.
It's time to hold Shell accountable and ensure it cleans up its act in Nigeria. Add your name to Amnesty's petition against Shell today.
In solidarity,
Tanuka Loha
Director, Demand Dignity Campaign
Amnesty International USA
Shell's oil spill took away Emmanuel's livelihood, his drinking water, the economic value of his land -- his very way of life.
His neighbors, and tens of thousands of people living along the Niger Delta, have suffered the same devastating fate caused by oil spill after oil spill. While the Niger Delta has been awash in pollution, Shell has been swimming in profits -- $30.9 billion globally in 2011.
Tell Shell -- Own up. Pay up. Clean up. Make this message loud, clear and inescapable -- add your name to Amnesty's petition demanding justice for Emmanuel and the people harmed by Shell in the Niger Delta.
Ahead of Shell's Annual General Meeting this May, Amnesty will deliver the signatures of hundreds of thousands of activists from around the world in an unsparing public message to CEO Peter Voser and Shell shareholders.
Oil spills are endemic in the Niger Delta, and Shell is the biggest culprit. Why does the oil giant refuse to come clean about its spills in Nigeria? Just yesterday, Amnesty International and the Nigerian NGO, the Centre for Environment, Human Rights and Development, released new analysis showing that at least 103,000 barrels of oil were spilled over 72 days in Emmanuel's town of Bodo -- more than 60 times the volume that Shell repeatedly has claimed leaked.
But thanks to activists like you, corporations like Shell can't hide their human rights abuses anymore. Amnesty International is calling Shell out in a big way, urging the company to make a clear and public commitment to contribute $1 billion as an initial payment to an independent clean-up fund.
People like Emmanuel deserve justice: a full clean-up, real reparations and a beginning to an end to their nightmare.
It's time to hold Shell accountable and ensure it cleans up its act in Nigeria. Add your name to Amnesty's petition against Shell today.
In solidarity,
Tanuka Loha
Director, Demand Dignity Campaign
Amnesty International USA
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