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cover of episode Oil spills in the Niger Delta: Will Shell come clean?

Oil spills in the Niger Delta: Will Shell come clean?

2025/5/22
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Media Storm

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Emem Okon
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Lazarus Tamana
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Lazarus Tamana: 我亲身经历了1968年的石油井喷,那次事故给我的社区带来了毁灭性的打击。石油覆盖了所有的河流,使得我们这些以农业和渔业为生的奥贡人无法正常生活和工作。这不仅仅是生计问题,我们的文化遗产也遭到了彻底的破坏。酸雨和烟尘污染了我们的庄稼和河流,我们根本无力应对。 自从1990年成立MOSOP以来,我一直致力于将我们的困境带到国际舞台,呼吁联合国、欧盟以及所有愿意倾听的人们关注。国际特赦组织在1995年接手了我们的案件,肯·萨鲁瓦的牺牲更是激励着我们。尽管壳牌否认对他的死负有责任,但他们支付的和解金和尼日利亚被暂停英联邦成员资格的事实,都说明了问题的严重性。我并不害怕,因为我知道这是我必须做的事情,为了奥贡人民,我会坚持到底。 Emem Okon: 作为Quebec Caché Women Development and Resource Centre的执行董事,我致力于研究石油泄漏对妇女健康的影响。我们在奥图瓦巴吉社区的研究发现,那里的妇女普遍存在月经失调和早发性更年期的问题。更令人震惊的是,100%参与调查的妇女血液中都含有超标8000倍的碳氢化合物。许多妇女面临着怀孕困难和流产的挑战,这在重视子嗣的非洲传统家庭中造成了巨大的压力和冲突。人们常常将这些问题归咎于妇女自身,而忽视了环境污染的根本原因。我们生活在污染中,饮用被污染的水,呼吸被污染的空气,食用被污染的食物,这影响着我们生活的方方面面。壳牌必须为他们造成的破坏承担责任,并为社区带来正义。

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Warning: this episode contains mentions of baby loss.

Three years ago, we brought you the story )of a Nigerian fishing community suing Shell in UK courts over oil spills. This year marks 10 years since their battle began, and the year it finally goes to trial.

The Niger Delta is one of the ten most important wetland ecosystems in the world, home to some 31 million people. But the river that sustains so many lives of so many species has become poisoned over decades by oil.

Environmental justice is a long and winding road, but communities are standing firm in their bids to hold the world’s most powerful corporations to account. They rely on media coverage to keep their fights in the limelight, yet they often struggle to be seen. Why is that?

In this episode, we are joined by Lazarus Tamana, UK president of the Movement For The Survival of The Ogoni People , and Dr Emem Okon, Executive Director of community-led NGO Kebetkache Women Development & Resource Centre. They help us unpick the media’s coverage of the climate crisis - examining undisclosed relationships between news outlets and corporations, a failure to understand national vs. ‘World’ news, and telling choices of media language.

Follow Amnesty UK’s ‘No Clean Up, No Justice)’, read Dr Emem Okon’s research), with the Kebetkache) Women Development and Resource Centre and Both Ends).

The episode is hosted and produced by Mathilda Mallinson (⁠@mathildamall⁠)) and Helena Wadia (⁠@helenawadia⁠)) , with Lily Erwood as Assistant Producer.

The music is by ⁠@soundofsamfire⁠)

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