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| BENN UNDER PRESSURE OVER BP PIPELINE CASH |
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| Tuesday, 14 October 2003 | |
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Press release from: BENN UNDER PRESSURE OVER BP PIPELINE CASH Caspian project breaks World Bank rules on 173 counts Hilary Benn, the new International Development Secretary comes under pressure on Tuesday, when environment and human rights groups present a dossier slamming a planned $3.5 billion Caspian oil pipeline. Just one week into the job, Benn must decide by the end of the month whether to give public funds to the BP-led Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline. The project is looking for 70% of its cost, or $2.5 billion, in loans - led by the World Bank and the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development. But research by watchdog groups has found that the project breaks World Bank lending guidelines on 173 separate counts [1]. The guidelines are designed to protect local people and the environment, and to prevent damaging projects receiving the Banks' backing. This will be a difficult decision for Benn. While his responsibility as Secretary of State for International Development is to uphold World Bank standards on development and human rights, he will be under pressure from Tony Blair to support the project. BP, sometimes dubbed "Blair Petroleum" for its closeness to the Prime Minister, has insisted that the pipeline must have "free public money" [2]. The 220-page dossier, compiled by fifteen groups in ten countries [3], finds that just on the issue of consulting local people, the project breaks six World Bank policies, on 83 counts. Pipeline companies only met with 2% of the people living along the route. The World Bank has recently been criticised by its own Ombudsman for persistent failures in consultation on the projects it has funded [4]. Hannah Griffiths, of Friends of the Earth, commented: The dossier also finds that the pipeline stands to worsen the human rights situation of the Kurdish people in Turkey. Over 30 Kurdish people have submitted legal complaints to the European Commission, claiming that they have been denied their rights. Last month, the European Commission agreed to investigate the pipeline [5]. The feared state Gendarmerie will have responsibility for policing the line - despite having been harshly criticised by the Council of Europe on its rights record. But BP denies the pipeline will have any adverse impact on the Kurds [6]. Kerim Yildiz, Director of the Kurdish Human Rights Project, added: Nicholas Hildyard, of the Corner House, said: "If Hilary Benn says yes to this, he will undermine the credibility of the banks' own policies, and undermine the very possibility that they can contribute positively to development. At the very least, he must call for a delay in the project, until its many deficiencies are rectified". For more information Contact Greg Muttitt, of PLATFORM, on +44 (0) 7970 589 611 See also website www.baku.org.uk PHOTO OPPORTUNITY: NO PUBLIC MONEY FOR BP PIPELINE WHEN: 11am, Tuesday 14th October Notes for editors
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