On Friday, 16 October, from 16.00-17.00, we will organise an online discussion about the Kiobel v. Shell case,
currently before Dutch courts in the Hague. The discussion will retrace
the trajectory followed by the case in reaching The Hague, explain the
arguments raised by both parties in the proceedings, and assess the
potential relevance of the future ruling for the wider debate on
corporate accountability/liability for human rights violations.
Background
In 1995, nine local activists from the Ogoniland region of
Nigeria (the Ogoni nine) were executed by the Nigerian authorities, then
under the military dictatorship of General Sani Abacha. They were
protesting against the widespread pollution stemming from the
exploitation of local oil resources by a Nigerian subsidiary of Royal
Dutch Shell when they were arrested and found guilty of murder in a sham
trial. Their deaths led first to a series of complaints against Royal
Dutch Shell in the United States on the basis of the alien tort statute
(ATS). One of them, lodged by Esther Kiobel, the wife of one of those
killed (Dr Barinem Kiobel), reached the US Supreme Court. Famously, the
Court decided to curtail the application of the ATS in situations that
do not sufficiently 'touch and concern' the territory of the United
States.
This ruling put an end to Esther Kiobel's US lawsuit, but
it did not stop her, together with three other widows (Victoria Bera,
Blessing Eawo and Charity Levula), from seeking to hold the
multinational company accountable for its alleged involvement in the
deaths of their husbands. Instead, in 2017, they decided to continue
their quest for justice on Royal Dutch Shell’s home turf, before Dutch
courts in The Hague. 25 years after the death of the Ogoni nine, the
court in The Hague just finished hearing the pleas of the parties and
will render its much-awaited decision in the coming months.
Confirmed speakers
- Tom de Boer (Human rights lawyer representing the claimants, Prakken d'Oliveira)
- Lucas Roorda (Utrecht University)
- Tara van Ho (Essex University)
- Antoine Duval, Senior researcher at the T.M.C Asser Instituut, will moderate the discussion
Register here to join the discussion on Friday.