For immediate release - 26th September
Press release from:
PLATFORM
Friends of the Earth
Kurdish Human Rights Project
The Baku Ceyhan Campaign
The Corner House
PUBLIC BANK IN PIPELINE PROTEST Legal statements of villagers presented
PHOTO OPPORTUNITY: NO PUBLIC MONEY FOR BP PIPELINE
WHEN: Friday 26th September, 12.30pm
WHERE: European Bank of Reconstruction & Development, One Exchange
Square, London EC2
WHAT: Gagged protesters will hold and present legal testimonies of
local people, who will be affected by the pipeline, stating that they
have not been consulted. The protest 'brings consultation to the bank'.
Environment and human rights campaigners will target a key City bank on Friday, urging it not to give taxpayers' money to an oil pipeline from the Caspian Sea to Turkey.
The protest will take place at the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), which a BP-led consortium has approached for public funding for its Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline. The planned $3 billion pipeline would pass through 1,000 miles of Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey. [1]
On Friday protesters will present legal testimonies of 34 people affected by the pipeline, who have joined a legal challenge to the project through the European Commission. [2]
Last month the European Commission announced that it would investigate human rights abuses arising from the pipeline project. This followed a complaint by environment and human rights groups and Kurdish villagers affected by the project, claiming that the legal agreements for the project break Turkey's accession agreements for entry into the European Union. [3]
Kerim Yildiz, Director of the Kurdish Human Rights Project, commented, "These statements are just the tip of the iceberg, and more are coming in every day. Pipeline companies have not consulted the people who will be harmed by the project. Until this is rectified, it must not receive public funding".
Kate Geary, of the Baku Ceyhan Campaign, said, "Consultation on this project has been a sham. Since neither BP nor EBRD has consulted properly, we are bringing affected people's views to them".
The EBRD is owned publicly, by its member countries, and was set up to support economic and democratic transition in former Soviet Bloc countries. The UK's vote on whether to back the project is one of the biggest issues currently facing Secretary of State for International Development, Valerie Amos.
Tony Juniper, Director of Friends of the Earth, commented, "This pipeline is designed to boost BP's profits at the expense of local people and the environment. Taxpayers' money should be used for social development and for clean energies, not for dirty fossil fuel projects which worsen climate change".
James Marriott, of PLATFORM, added, "This project will harm local economies, by damaging farmland and threatening Georgia's vital mineral water production. It will undermine democracy, through draconian legal agreements that restrict the host governments' ability to regulate. If EBRD decides to back this project, it will be contradicting its mission of supporting democracy and economic development".
For more information
Contact Greg Muttitt, of PLATFORM, on +44 (0) 7970 589 611
See also website www.baku.org.uk
Neil Verlander / Helen Burley, Friends of the Earth press office, 020
7566 1649
Rochelle Harris, Public Relations Officer, Kurdish Human Rights Project,
020 7282 2772
Notes for editors
Kurdish Human Rights Project
11 Guilford Street
London
WC1N 1DH
United Kingdom
Photos:
Diyarbakir
Trial Ed Kashi
Hasankeyf - Dean Bialek
Web Design:
©
Manuella Martin 2002
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