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“This agreement marks an important milestone for Shell in Nigeria, aligning with our previously announced intent to exit onshore oil production in the Niger Delta,” Zoe Yujnovich, Shell’s integrated gas and upstream director, said in a statement. The assets that Shell is selling are largely owned by the Nigerian government’s national oil company NNPC, which holds a 55% stake. However, pollution from oil and natural gas production has prevented residents from accessing clean water, hurt farming and fishing, and heightened tensions. Despite joint military operations and a government benefits program for former militants that accompanied the amnesty deal, the Niger Delta remains volatile. The oil industry faces risks of violence, including pipeline vandalism by oil thieves, whom companies often blame for oil spills.
Persons: — Shell, Shell, Zoe Yujnovich, France's TotalEnergies, , Ledum Mitee, Dumnamene Organizations: Shell, Aradel Energy, Nigerian, Eni, Movement, Ogoni, Youths, Environmental Advocacy, AP Locations: ABUJA, Nigeria, Niger Delta, West, London, Ogoni People, Niger, Guinea
Nigerian widows end their case in the Netherlands against Shell
  + stars: | 2022-11-07 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
[1/2] Widows Esther Kiobel and Victoria Bera are seen at a court after a hearing for a damages suit brought against energy company Royal Dutch Shell by four widows of activists executed by Nigerian government in 1995, in The Hague, Netherlands May 01, 2019. REUTERS/Piroschka van de WouwAMSTERDAM, Nov 7 (Reuters) - A group of four widows who had sought to hold Shell (SHEL.L) liable for damages in the Netherlands after their anti-oil activist husbands were executed by the Nigerian government in 1995 have cancelled further legal proceedings, their lawyer said on Monday. "Obviously this is not without disappointment and frustration," said lawyer Channa Samkalden in statement announcing that the widows have cancelled an appeal launched after the Hague District Court rejected their case earlier this year. In March, the Hague court ruled there was not enough evidence to support the widows' assertion that Shell had bribed witnesses to give false testimony in the trial that led to the men's executions. "We have always denied the allegations made against Shell in this case," Shell said in a statement Monday.
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