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Blogs

Question & Answers, part 1: Will Shell show up?

Submitted by Lars on Thu, 11/27/2008 - 12:16.
  • About the film

Ifie and I are in Amsterdam this week as Poison Fire competes at IDFA, the world’s biggest documentary film festival. We’ve shown the film twice in sold-out cinema theaters. Three more screenings remain. After each show there is a questions and answers sessions. The IDFA audience is wonderful and I wish these Q&A sessions could go on for hours instead of just the 10-15 minutes we get after each show.

So let’s continue here. I will start with the two most common questions that we get all the time

Q: Have you shown the film to Shell?

A: Yes we have. We posted a trailer and some earlier versions of the film to the website for some time, and within days we had hundreds of hits from ip numbers that belong to Shell. We assume that the film has been discussed within the company.

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Testimony in the U.S. Senate

Submitted by Lars on Sun, 09/28/2008 - 08:05.

This week Ka Hsaw Wa from EarthRights International and Nnimmo Bassey from Environmental Rights Action gave testimony to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee on how oil companies deploy military force against peaceful protesters in Burma and Nigeria, in a hearing on the human rights responsibilities of american oil companies.

Nnimmo's full testimony is excellent and very comprehensive. He showed how silencing peaceful protest with military means leads to violent insurgency

Oil companies, including Chevron and Shell, have repeatedly used the Nigerian military to violently repress Delta inhabitants’ peaceful protests, causing deaths and injuries, and creating an environment in which ordinary citizens are unable to exercise their rights to free expression.

And advocates dialogue

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EU "helps" Nigeria get rid of its gas

Submitted by Lars on Fri, 09/19/2008 - 17:44.

Lots of worrying news are coming from the Niger Delta this week. In international media MEND's "oil war" is getting the headlines. In Nigerian newspapers pundits are divided over the federal government's surprise move to establish a Niger Delta Ministry.

Then BBC reported yesterday that the EU will help Nigeria invest in a Trans Saharan Gas Pipeline. The Financial Times has more detail:

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Interview with Shell CEO

Submitted by Lars on Thu, 09/18/2008 - 07:19.

Jeroen van der Veer: Shell doesn't like flaring and is not in the oil business for the money.

The Green Rush: Full transcript of interview with Jeroen van der Veer - Times Online

In Shell's view, we do not like flaring at all, so our policy is already for years that wherever we flare that we try to reduce or completely stop it. If I look at the world, at the Shell operations, basically we have only the problem in Nigeria left.

(...)

I'm always amazed that people think that oil companies they are just for the money and greedy and like to do a lousy job.

(...)

We think to take environmental aspects into account is good long-term business as well because it prevents problems, and it helps that people think that Shell is doing a good job so that if they have a consumer choice they fuel up with our gasoline.

Really? We fuel up with Shell if we have a choice?

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Participatory Video

Submitted by Lars on Tue, 09/16/2008 - 21:38.
  • About the film

The Poison Fire documentary grew out of a participatory video training project by Environmental Rights Action. The idea was to establish video production capacity with a network of volunteers in the communities, and enable them to produce and publish "video testimonies" to the web, and eventually a system for crowdsourcing environmental monitoring info.  Although there is still great interest in the project from communities and some state government agencies, it has not yet taken off due to lack of funding and a central base or hub for the network.

The following article on the method was published in ICT update, November 2006

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Interview in The Ecologist

Submitted by Lars on Sun, 09/14/2008 - 20:54.
  • About the film

From The Ecologist: Poison Fire Interview
by Phil Moore 11/09/2008

Filmmaker Lars Johansson talks to the Ecologist about the making of the film 'Poison Fire' and the curse of oil in the Niger Delta.

Tell us how you came to make the film ‘Poison Fire’

Friends of the Earth International (FOEI) wanted to encourage national groups to produce video reports with local perspectives on how economic globalisation influences communities. They contacted me because they had heard about the work I had been doing in Tanzania with ‘participatory video’. A proposal was put together with Environmental Rights Action in Nigeria and FOEI managed to raise funds so that I could go there.

What is gas flaring and why does it occur?

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Shell stops gas flaring... in Iraq

Submitted by Lars on Sat, 09/13/2008 - 04:28.


Shell Seals $4 Billion Iraq Deal at Oil Change

Shell has been awarded a $4bn contract in the south of the country to supply gas for Iraqi domestic use but also for export. Shell’s project is intended to make use of the gas flared off by the oil industry in the south of Iraq.

I'll take that as an excuse to post this link to the funniest TV show on Iraqi oil you will ever see: Robert Newmans History of Oil



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Thank God for internet

Submitted by Lars on Sun, 09/07/2008 - 18:47.



A thread with many interesting comments on Poison Fire tops the huge Nigerian website nairaland.com right now

A couple of excerpts:

This video and others like it never cease to shock me - the sheer destruction, the poverty, the utter helplessness of the people.(...) I must say these lawyers, rights activists and community leaders are the real heroes, not the gun totting MEND or whatever they call themselves. These guys are working hard to change things within the law. Sadly they are not always successful, but their spirit and determination must be applauded.


Wow, I had goose pimples watching this movie. I don't even know what to say. No matter how corrupt the country is, that is no excuse for the way Shell is behaving. Thanks for posting this.
Thank God for internet. We can all do something, even if it is as little as sending the link to all your friends on facebook, please do. People need to see this, especially the Hague conference.

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Poison Fire activists, journalists detained by military

Submitted by Lars on Wed, 09/03/2008 - 08:30.
  • News

Three of the activists in the film were detained by military yesterday

  • Jonah Gbemre, the plaintiff from Iwhrekan who won the case against  Shell
  • Comrade Che Ibegura
  • Chima Williams, the ERA lawyer



Updated press release  from Environmental Rights Action

September 3, 2008

Nigeria: Environmentalists Denounce Arrests in Gas Flaring-Affected Community

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Latest News


  • Interview in The Ecologist
  • Poison Fire activists, journalists detained by military


Recent blog posts

  • Question & Answers, part 1: Will Shell show up?
  • Testimony in the U.S. Senate
  • EU "helps" Nigeria get rid of its gas
  • Interview with Shell CEO
  • Participatory Video
  • Interview in The Ecologist
  • Shell stops gas flaring... in Iraq
  • Thank God for internet
  • Poison Fire activists, journalists detained by military
more

Order the Poison Fire DVD here

Environmental Rights Action
Friends of the Earth International
Climate Justice Programme

Poison Fire documentary and website is produced by Lars Johansson, Maweni Farm, Soni, Tanzania

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