Heute, was halten wir von Shell und was macht Shell am Nigerdelta?
Members of Nigeria's Ogoni community protest against Shell in New York
A privately owned water tap is locked in Port Harcourt, Nigeria, October 2004. Port Harcourt, the oil capital of Africa is a crowded city plagued by crime where most people live on mud streets without electricity, running water or sewer. Despite producing 2.26 million barrels of oil a day, 60 percent of Nigerians live below the poverty line.
Oil from a leaking pipeline burns in Goi-Bodo, a swamp area of the Niger Delta in Nigeria, October 2004. Oil company Royal Dutch Shell said the leak was caused by unknown saboteurs on Monday who used a hacksaw to cut open a major pipeline feeding oil to an export terminal at Bonny, southern Nigeria.
Shell oil spill at Goi, Ogoni Land, NIger Delta. © Alison Dilworth/Friends of the Earth, April 2005
Shell oil spill at Goi, Ogoni Land, NIger Delta. © Alison Dilworth/Friends of the Earth, April 2005
Shell oil spill at Rukpoku, Niger Delta, showing no clean up or remediation after 3 months. © Elaine Gilligan/Friends of the Earth, June 2004
Shell oil-heads leaking at K-Dere, Ogoni. © Elaine Gilligan/Friends of the Earth, June 2004
Ogoni Oil Spill, 2007, ©George Osodi.
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