Soenke Zehle on Thu, 11 Jul 2002 11:14:02 +0200 (CEST)


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[Nettime-bold] From Civil to Social Rights


Whatever you might think about the notion of "rights" as such, the trend
toward a recognition of "material" human rights is nonetheless encouraging,
I think - and a relatively new terrain of hr activism. Soenke

PEOPLE VS. BIG OIL: INDIGENOUS RIGHTS RECOGNIZED IN NIGERIA ***
By Jim Lobe

(Editor's Note: Excerpted from a new Self-Determination News article
available in its entirety at
http://www.selfdetermine.org/news/0207nigeria.html .)

At a time when the petropolitics of the Bush administration seem to reign
supreme, the rights of peoples affected by the global hunt for oil have
received an important boost. An African commission has ruled the Nigerian
government should compensate the Ogoni people for abuses against their
lands, environment, housing, and health caused by oil production and
government security forces. Nigerian and international groups say that the
ruling by the nine-member African Commission on Human and People's Rights
(ACHPR) is a sweeping affirmation of what the human rights community calls
ESC rights--defined by the UN's International Covenant on Economic, Social,
and, Cultural Rights.

The commission called on Nigeria to undertake a "comprehensive cleanup of
lands and rivers damaged by oil operations." It must also ensure that the
social and environmental impact of future oil development on its territory
does not harm local communities.

Human rights groups are hailing the commission's decision as a major
breakthrough in the battle for international recognition of ESC rights,
which have long been given lesser status--particularly by Western
countries--than political and civil rights. "This is the first decision by
the African Commission to specifically and comprehensively address
violations of economic and social and cultural rights under the Africa
Charter," said Felix Morka, director of the Lagos-based Social and Economic
Rights Actions Centre (SERAC), which launched the case against the military
regime of Gen. Sani Abacha in 1996. Morka observed that the recent ruling
was the strongest and most articulate statement on the validity and
enforceability of economic and social rights emanating from any
intergovernmental human rights body.

"It is a remarkable decision indeed," said Bronwen Manby, a Nigeria
specialist at the London office of Human Rights Watch (HRW). "The very fact
that it's a decision by the African Commission--which is a body of the
Organisation of African Unity (OAU) and appointed by governments--means
that it will certainly form a part of the body of international
jurisprudence on economic and social rights."

The case was filed shortly after the execution in November 1995 of nine
leaders of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP),
including the world-renowned playwright and author, Ken Saro-wiwa. MOSOP
and Saro-wiwa had led a global campaign to publicize the plight of the
Ogonis, a minority in the oil-rich Niger Delta region, whose lands and
rivers had been polluted for years as a result of operations by Shell
Petroleum Development Corporations, the area's largest foreign oil
producer, and the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC). Protests by
the Ogoni, especially in the early 1990s, were met with fierce military
repression, including what one internal government memo called "wasting
operations" against Ogoni villages and suspected MOSOP activists. Scores of
people were killed and their property looted and burned.

After the 1995 executions, Shell became a target of an international
consumer boycott, while a number of Western countries slapped diplomatic
and other sanctions on the military regime, most of which lifted only after
the return of civilian rule in 1999 when retired Gen. Obusegun Obasanjo won
elections. Apart from one submission that confirmed the main allegations
filed by SERAC, the Obasanjo government did not participate in the case,
forcing the Commission to conclude that Nigerian courts were not prepared
to act on the plaintiffs' case. Although the judgement was communicated to
the government early last month, Abuja has not yet reacted officially.

The decision, which runs 14 pages, asserts that the government violated
seven articles of the 1981 African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights, to
which Nigeria is a signatory. They included the rights: "to enjoy the best
attainable state of physical and mental health," "to a general satisfactory
environment favorable to [the peoples'] development," and to "freely
dispose of their wealth and natural resources."

According to the ruling, "By any measure of standards, its practice falls
short of the minimum conduct expected of governments." In a direct
reference to the role of the oil corporations, the commission observed:
"The intervention of multinational corporations may be a potentially
positive force for development if the State and the people concerned are
ever mindful of the common good and the sacred rights of individuals and
communities."

The decision is important for people throughout the world who suffer from
corporate practices, said Roger Normand, director of the New York-based
Center for Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights (CESR), which co-sponsored
the case with SERAC.

"I believe that this can serve as a precedent not only throughout Africa,
but also for all similar efforts to hold governments accountable for gross
human rights violations linked to abusive corporate practices," he added.
Normand and others also agreed with Morka that the decision is the
strongest affirmation to date by an inter-governmental body of ESC rights.
Despite their inclusion in the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
this family of rights have tended to be given second-class status by the
West, including Western-based human rights groups such as Human Rights
Watch and Amnesty International.

Western nations agreed most recently at the 1993 World Conference on Human
Rights in Vienna that all rights in the Universal Declaration are
indivisible and interdependent, however, "for most of the past 50 years,
these rights were totally neglected by governments and human rights NGOs,"
according to Larry Cox, senior program officer for international human
rights at the New York-based Ford Foundation. "But in the last five years,
we've seen the beginning of real momentum on these rights, led first and
foremost by groups in the Global South who are in many ways the most
adversely affected by the lack of such rights," he noted. "That's the
history of the human rights movement: people who make these rights real are
the victims who are fighting for them."

Although the U.S. government has long agreed that all of the rights
included in the Universal Declaration are indivisible and interdependent,
Washington has tended to treat economic and social rights more as
privileges than as core rights. Indeed, the State Department's annual human
rights country reports do not explicitly cover economic and social rights.
In that respect, said Normand, the African Commission's decision "is moving
ahead of western standards in the protection of economic, social, and
cultural rights--an important achievement for Africa, but an example for
the rest of the world."

(Jim Lobe <jlobe@starpower.net> writes for Foreign Policy In Focus (online
at www.fpif.org) as well as for OneWorld.net and Inter Press Service.)

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