Dutch court rejects suit of ‘Ogoni Nine’ widows against Shell
EMERGENCY DIGEST- A Dutch court has thrown out a suit against Shell brought by four widows of activists who were executed by late Nigerian military leader Sani Abacha in 1995 after protests against the company’s exploitation of the oil-rich Niger Delta.
The court said there was not enough evidence to support the widows’ claim that Shell had been involved in bribing witnesses related to the case.
In 2019, the court had handed the widows a rare win in their long-running battle by allowing the case to continue. But it had also said the claimants needed to prove Shell’s liability.
Shell has always denied wrongdoing.
Esther Kiobel, whose husband Barinem Kiobel was among those executed, said she would file an appeal at The Hague.
“We can’t do it in Nigeria because they [the government] are the collaborators,” she said. “I want their [activists] names exonerated. That’s what I want and that’s what I’m fighting for.”
The lawyer for the widows, Channa Samkalden, said the others were also considering filing an appeal.
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The court heard testimony from five witnesses, including several who said they had been paid by Shell representatives for rehearsed false testimony in the trial that led to the men’s execution.
But the court issued its ruling on Wednesday after hearing witness testimony that it said was not sufficient or verifiable enough to establish the responsibility or involvement of Shell or its Nigerian subsidiary SPDC.
“The witnesses’ testimony relies for a large part on assumptions and interpretations and cannot be enough to conclude that the money that they received at the time actually was from SPDC, and that actual employees of SPDC were present,” Judge Larissa Alwin said.
The men executed were among a group that became known as the “Ogoni Nine”. The activists included the writer and environmentalist Ken Saro-Wiwa.
The nine activists were arrested and hanged after a trial that turned international opinion against Nigeria’s then-military rulers and made the country a pariah. Hameed Ibrahim Ali, current chief of Nigerian customs service, was a member of the military tribunal that convicted the activists.
Relatives sought to hold Shell partially responsible in foreign courts, after exhausting legal possibilities in Nigeria.
In a 2009 settlement in the United States, Shell paid $15.5m to one group of activists’ families, including the Saro-Wiwa estate but the oil corporation also denied any responsibility or wrongdoing.