Business

Ahead of Onshore Divestment, Rivers Community Asks Shell To Pay For Farmland Damages

 People of Ejalawa Community in Oken-Ogosu in Egbalor Ebubu/Eleme in Rivers State are set to truncate the planned selling of Shell Petroleum Development Company Limited’s onshore property, insisting that court order for the payment of damages caused their farmland should be made first before any other consideration.

The community equally has the federal government to ensure that the oil company pay its adjudged debt due to degradation of farmlands before it is allowed to wound up its onshore business in Nigeria.

The Chairman of the Community, Erastus Olungwe,in a statement made available to journalists in Abuja, said Federal High Court in Owerri, Imo State presided by Justice T.G Ringim has ordered Shell and two others to pay N800 billion to the community for the damages caused to farmland and others by oil spillage in 2019.

Olungwe, in the statement said: “The court also ordered multinationals to promptly and expeditiously remediate Ejalawa land to International Agricultural Soil (IAS). We want to draw attention of Federal Government to an important legal development that concerns the community as regard environmental pollution.

“Based on this background that court in Owerri has rightly recognized the severity of the oil spillage and taken measures to seek redress for our community hence the judgment delivered in Suit No FHC/OW/CS/05/2020 a case between Chief Isaac Obor-ntito Torchi ,and 87.vs Shell and 4 others.”

He lamented that the environmental pollution caused by oil firms has had a detrimental effect on many communities causing risk to our health, natural resources and overall well-being of the community, adding that Shell despite the legal order seek to liquidate its assets, including the property that is crucial to the realisation of our rightful compensation.

He noted that: “The oil firm has made a public notice of her intention to sell her entire shareholding without first complying with the Order of Court. That is the Order mandating Shell to compensate Ejalawa community with the sum of N800 billion as well as clean the community.”

Olungwe further maintained that the impending sale threatens to deprive the community of the just restitution that has been adjudicated upon and, consequently, prolongs the anguish and hardships they have endured.

He urged the federal government to restrain Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigerian from selling or parting with any of its property until it has fulfilled the Order of the Court.

Michael Olugbode in Abuja

Follow us on:

AriseNews

Recent Posts

President Mnangagwa Ends Death Penalty in Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe has abolished the death penalty as President Mnangagwa enacts a historic law, hailed by…

2 hours ago

Wike Reveals How Peter Odili Rescued His Career + Tinubu Hails Warri Refinery + Uju Kennedy Acts – Trending With Ojy Okpe

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qw_uwbzYn8A The Minister of the federal capital territory, Nyesome Wike, has been trending after a…

5 hours ago

Guantanamo Bay Detainee Ridah Bin Saleh al-Yazidi Repatriated to Tunisia

Saleh al-Yazidi has been repatriated to Tunisia following a US review process, the Pentagon confirms.

7 hours ago

West Ham’s Michail Antonio Released from Hospital After Breaking Leg in Crash

Michail Antonio has been discharged from hospital after undergoing surgery for a leg break sustained…

7 hours ago

£10m Jewellery Heist: London Mansion Owners Offer £1.5m Reward for Thief’s Capture

Owners of a London mansion have offered £1.5m reward after £10m worth of jewellery was…

7 hours ago

US Treasury Confirms Cybersecurity Incident Linked to Chinese Hackers

The US treasury has revealed that Chinese hackers have accessed workstations via a third-party breach

7 hours ago