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Derniers articles :

Le Forum des ONG interpelle la Commission africaine des droits de l’Homme et des peuples sur des situations d’urgence - - 13 novembre 2007
Le Soudan est inacceptable à la présidence de l’Union Africaine - - 24 janvier 2006
Sudan Unfit for African Union Presidency - - 24 January 2006
L’Union africaine doit se prononcer sur les graves violations des droits de l’Homme perpétrées sur le continent et exhorter les Etats à lutter contre leur impunité - - 17 janvier 2006
The African Union must speak out regarding the grave violations of human rights perpetuated on the Continent and must exhort the States to fight against impunity for these violations - - 17 January 2006
Un nouveau rapport accuse les compagnies pétrolières et les gouvernements de déroger secrètement et contractuellement aux droits humains - - 7 septembre 2005
La CADHP se prononce pour la mise en place immédiate de la Cour africaine des droits de l’Homme et des peuples - - 7 juin 2005
Halte à la destabilisation des Institutions de l’Union Africaine et de la CEDEAO par le Président Olusegun Obansanjo - - 5 juin 2005
Resolution on the establishment of an independent and effective african court on human and peoples’s right - 22 November 2004
Interdiction et prévention de la torture en Afrique - 22 novembre 2004
Lutte contre le terrorisme et le respect des droits de l’Homme - 22 novembre 2004


Voir également :


Afrique du Sud : Coalition Against Xenophobia: Memorandum to the premier of Gauteng
Côte d’Ivoire : Il faut mettre fin à l’impunité dont jouit un groupement estudiantin pro-gouvernemental
Côte d’Ivoire : End Impunity for Pro-Government Student Group
Afrique du Sud : Vague de violences xénophobes : besoin urgent d’une réponse politique
Burundi : Le gouvernement doit mettre fin aux exactions de la police
République démocratique du Congo : Il faut mettre fin aux effroyables souffrances à l’Est du Congo
Zimbabwe : Post-election violence increases in Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe : Les violences liées aux élections s’intensifient au Zimbabwe
République démocratique du Congo : Des défenseurs des droits de l’homme sont empêchés de rencontrer les victimes du massacre de Kilwa
Tchad : Inculper ou libérer les détenus politiques
Burkina Faso : Message à l’occasion des marches - meeting du 15 mars 2008
Cameroun : Agressions, arrestations et traitements dégradants vis-à-vis des étudiants
Burkina Faso : Plate forme d’action de la coalition nationale contre la vie chère
Cameroun : Les émeutes donnent lieu à une répression d’envergure
Burkina Faso : Appel pour des luttes organisées et massives contre la vie chère, la corruption, la fraude, l’impunité et pour les libertés


Site(s) web :

Human Rights Watch :
http://www.hrw.org/
African Rights :
Organisation mondiale contre la torture :
FIDH :
http://www.fidh.org/
Pambazuka News - Human Right :
Victims’ Rights Working Group (VRWG) :
Amnesty International :
Association pour le respect des Droits de l’Homme à Djibouti :
Campaign for Democratic and Workers’ Rights in Nigeria (CDWRN) :
Collectif des ligues pour la défense des droits de l’Homme :
Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition :
Djibwatch :
Ethiopian Human Rights Council (EHRC) :
Kenya Human Rights Commission :
Ligue Djiboutienne des droits humains :
Ligue Iteka :
Ligue togolaise des droits de l’homme :
Mouvement Ivoirien des Droits Humains :
Organisation contre les Violations des Droits Humains (OCVIDH) :
RJDH - Réseau des journalistes pour les Droits de l’Homme - Niger :
Rencontre africaine pour la défense des Droits de l’Homme :
SOS Esclaves Mauritanie :
Solidarity Committee for Ethiopian Political Prisoners :
Sudan Organisation Against Torture (SOAT) :
Vigilance Soudan :


Dernier(s) document(s) :

Violations des droits de l’Homme en Afrique sub-saharienne au motif de la lutte contre le terrorisme : une situation à hauts risques - Un rapport de la FIDH - 18 November 2005 (PDF - 613 kb)

Chad-Cameroon pipeline
New report accuses oil companies and governments of secretly contracting out of human rights

7 September 2005
- http://www.amnesty.org


The $US 4.2billion Chad-Cameroon oil pipeline risks freezing human rights protection for decades to come for the thousands of people who live in its path, says Amnesty International in a new report published today.

The ExxonMobil-led consortium that operates the pipeline is effectively side-stepping human rights law in Chad and in Cameroon," said Andrea Shemberg, legal advisor to Amnesty International UK.

The investment agreements governing the project risk seriously undermining the ability and willingness of Chad and Cameroon to protect their citizens’ human rights, making the oil companies de facto unaccountable in the pipeline zone. In effect, the parties to the agreements - the governments of Chad and Cameroon and the ExxonMobil-led oil consortium, which also includes Chevron Corporation of the US and Petronas Bhd of Malaysia - have contracted out of their human rights responsibilities.”

The 54-page report (PDF), Contracting out of human rights: The Chad-Cameroon pipeline project, examines the framework of legal agreements, known as ‘Host Government Agreements’ (HGAs) [1], governing the construction and operation of the Doba oilfields in Chad and the pipeline that takes the oil to Cameroon’s Atlantic coast. The pipeline is supported by the World Bank and is the single largest foreign investment project in Africa [2].

The report finds that the legal agreements governing the project place a ‘price tag’ on human rights by creating financial disincentives for the governments of Chad and Cameroon to protect human rights. The agreements may require the two countries to pay large financial penalties if they interrupt the operation of the pipeline or oil-fields - even when making an intervention to protect rights and enforce laws that apply elsewhere in their countries. This makes it extremely difficult for Chad and Cameroon to take action against company malpractice, and for individuals adversely affected by the pipeline to obtain redress.

The operation of the oilfields and pipeline has already led to alleged human rights abuses against poor farmers in the region who claim they were denied access to their land, which ExxonMobil refused either to compensate them for or to return to them. Some villages have reportedly been denied access to their sole safe water supply and Kribi fishermen who work off Cameroon’s coast have had their livelihoods seriously threatened by the pipeline. The project’s contracts open the door for further abuses such as these, without effective redress, throughout the lifetime of the project - up to 70 years.

In addition, the legal agreements lack transparency, in so far as they have been considered commercially confidential and were shielded from public scrutiny until passed into law. Amnesty International believes that human rights are more likely to be respected on major infrastructure projects when the legal agreements behind them are subject to public scrutiny.

Amnesty International’s report is warning that human rights protections are already compromised in Chad and Cameroon and that these legal agreements may exacerbate the situation. The report explains that there is a prevailing climate of fear and intimidation around the pipeline, some of whose critics have already been arrested and intimidated. In this context it is essential that human rights protection is of the highest standard.

Amnesty International is publishing the report as part of ongoing research into the impact of private investment agreements on human rights. While the organisation appreciates that ‘stabilisation clauses’ and similar provisions - designed to reduce financial and political risks posed to foreign investors by sudden changes in national laws - are common in agreements between companies and countries hosting large projects, Amnesty International is concerned that the breadth of these provisions may undermine human rights and the administration of justice.

These agreements illustrate how companies are inserting themselves into the heart of governance. Disturbingly, there may be hundreds of such agreements in existence around the world, drawn up to a similar template, weakening the capacity of states to protect human rights and the environment," said Sheldon Leader, Professor of Law at the University of Essex and legal advisor to Amnesty International UK on this project .

Amnesty International’s report argues that the World Bank, and specifically its private lending institution, the International Finance Corporation (IFC), bear some responsibility for the danger the project’s agreements pose to human rights. Without World Bank support the project would not have gone forward, yet the Bank’s pre-lending assessments did not take into account the potential human rights impacts of the legal agreements. Amnesty International is concerned that the World Bank is supporting projects that could deter states from protecting human rights.

Amnesty International recommends that:
- the governments of Chad and Cameroon and the ExxonMobil-led oil consortium amend the legal agreements to include explicit guarantees that they cannot be used to undermine the human rights responsibilities of the states or companies involved;
- no government or company draw up or sign legal agreements that undermine human rights protection;
- projects supported by the World Bank, export credit agencies and other private lenders are not based on legal agreements that could undermine the ability of the host state to meet its human rights obligations.

The ExxonMobil-led consortium and the governments of Chad and Cameroon must amend the agreements immediately to ensure human rights are protected in these countries. This project must not continue without changes that guarantee that human rights will be upheld. Human rights are not negotiable items that companies and governments are permitted to eliminate by contract," said Andrea Shemberg.







[1] Host Government Agreements, between companies and the governments of states hosting large investment projects, are also known as ‘state-investor agreements’ and ‘concession agreements’.

[2] The ExxonMobil-led pipeline consortium also includes Chevron and Malaysian oil company Petronas, and its investment is supported by the World Bank, several export credit agencies and private banks. The pipeline was completed and began pumping oil in 2003.





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