Shell to pay N15bn to affected Niger Delta residents
15,600 fishermen will receive $3,300 each for losses caused by the
spills while the remaining $30 million will be donated to the community,
Law Firm, Leigh Day, which represented the fishermen, said.
Fishing communities in the Niger Delta were badly hit by oil spills which robbed them of their livelihood (Reuters)
Oil giant, Royal Dutch Shell is set to make a payout of $84 million (N15,493,809,854.06) to residents of the Bodo community in the Niger Delta area of Nigeria following two oil spills.
Managing Director of Shell Nigeria, Mutiu Sunmonu (Shell NG)
According to BBC, the lawyers have said that they are delighted at the massive payout which is the first of its kind and will serve to compensate the community which was “devastated by the two massive oil spills in 2008 and 2009”.
Fishing communities in the Niger Delta were badly hit by oil spills which robbed them of their livelihood (AFP)
“It is the first time that compensation has been paid following an oil spill in Nigeria to the thousands of individuals who have suffered loss,” the firm, Leigh Day said in a press release confirming the settlement.
Source:Jola Sotubo: pulse.ng, re-posted by Abdulgafar Esho (www.econsforumnews.blogspot.com)
Oil giant, Royal Dutch Shell is set to make a payout of $84 million (N15,493,809,854.06) to residents of the Bodo community in the Niger Delta area of Nigeria following two oil spills.
15,600
fishermen will receive $3,300 each for losses caused by the spills
while the remaining $30 million will be donated to the community, Law
Firm, Leigh Day, which represented the fishermen, said.
According to BBC, the lawyers have said that they are delighted at the massive payout which is the first of its kind and will serve to compensate the community which was “devastated by the two massive oil spills in 2008 and 2009”.
The lawyers also expressed their pleasure at the fact that their clients will receive the money in their personal accounts.
“It is the first time that compensation has been paid following an oil spill in Nigeria to the thousands of individuals who have suffered loss,” the firm, Leigh Day said in a press release confirming the settlement.
“What
they feel particularly pleased about is that the individual money is
going to them personally. In Nigeria mostly what happens is that chiefs
bring claims on behalf of the community, the chiefs then get the
compensation and the individuals seem hardly ever to see much of it.” Lawyer, Martyn Day said.
"So I think they're very pleased that we've been able to set up for them individual bank accounts,” he added.
Martyn Day also stated that it was “deeply
disappointing that Shell took six years to take this case seriously and
to recognise the true extent of the damage these spills caused to the
environment and to those who rely on it for their livelihood”.
The settlement was announced by the Managing Director of Shell’s Nigerian subsidiary, Mutiu Sunmonu.
“From the outset, we've accepted responsibility for the two deeply regrettable operational spills in Bodo,” Sunmonu said.
Shell
blamed both spills on operational failure of the pipelines saying that
the extent of environmental pollution in the area is caused by “the
scourge of oil theft and illegal refining”.
Shell has, in addition to the settlement, also pledged to clean up the Bodo Creek over the next few months.
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