|
london, tuesday 25 march 2003
no public money for new oil
uk taxpayers fund destruction and fuel
future conflict
100 campaigners will build a 150 metre
pipeline outside the London-based European
Bank for Reconstruction and Development to
protest against UK taxpayer funding for the
proposed Baku-Ceyhan pipeline. The pipeline
has been painted with slogans opposing the
project (such as 'No Public Money for New
Oil') in English, Kurdish and Georgian and
will be accompanied by Kurdish dancers and a
belly dancer. The pipeline will travel to the
BP office at Finsbury Circus. BP is the
company leading the project.
12.40 - outside the European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (EBRD),
Bishopsgate, EC2. A pipeline, 150 metres
long, will be built outside the EBRD and a
section of pipeline will be presented to
EBRD.
13.10 - the pipeline will arrive at BP's
office at Britannic House, Finsbury Circus,
EC2, where a second section of pipeline will
be presented to BP
Campaigners will build a giant pipeline in
the City of London on Tuesday (25 March), in
protest against plans to use UK tax-payers'
money to help fund a highly controversial
1,750 km oil pipeline through Turkey, Georgia
and Azerbaijan. The pipeline will cause huge
social and environmental disruption and will
fuel conflict in an unstable area. The
Baku-Ceyhan Campaign, which includes Friends
of the Earth, the Kurdish Human Rights
Project, the Corner House and PLATFORM,
opposes the proposal.
The protest will target the European Bank
for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD),
which is partly funded by UK taxpayers, and
which plans to help fund the Baku-Ceyhan
pipeline, despite its remit to promote
sustainable development. It will also target
British oil giant BP, which leads the
consortium promoting the pipeline. A
simultaneous protest will take place in
Tblesi, Georgia.
A recent fact-finding mission to Turkey
has recorded widespread human rights abuses
of people who oppose the pipeline proposal.
Members of the mission were trailed
throughout and prevented from meeting with
local people [1].
The EBRD and International Finance
Corporation of the World Bank (IFC) is
holding a consultation on funding for the
pipeline, which will carry oil from the
Caspian Sea to the Mediterranean.
The Baku-Ceyhan Campaign objects to the
proposal because the pipeline will:
-
-
make climate change worse. The pipeline
will transport oil which, when burnt, will
be equivalent to thirty per cent of the
UK's yearly carbon dioxide emissions;
-
create local pollution. Oil spills are
inevitable. The pipeline runs through areas
prone to erosion and earthquakes.
-
damage unique and sensitive natural
habitats, including Georgia's primeval
beech forest, and threaten the hugely
important Borjomi mineral water
aquifer
-
increase tensions in a turbulent
region. Eastern Turkey, Azerbaijan and
Georgia have all experienced recent
conflicts. The pipeline will require
substantial security, and will be a prime
target for terrorist attack.
-
increase human rights abuses and
repression. Kurds have been fighting for an
independent Kurdistan for more than 15
years. This has displaced up to 3 million
people and destroyed villages and hamlets.
Turkey has been widely condemned for human
rights abuses;
-
distort the economies of the three
nations due to an over reliance on oil
and increase in corruption.
Friends of the Earth's energy campaigner
Nick Rau said:
"This project is an environmental disaster
in the making. UK tax-payers' money must not
be used to fund this damaging and dangerous
pipeline. It will add to climate change,
pollute the environment, cause upheaval to
local communities and become a potential
source of conflict in an already volatile
region. The EBRD should be funding
sustainable solutions to our energy needs,
not creating even bigger problems for the
future."
A full briefing on the Baku-Ceyan Pipeline
is available from Friends of the Earth, see
www.baku.org.uk
for more information or read about the
local story.
Notes [1] Representatives from Corner
House, the Kurdish Human Rights Project, the
Bar Human Rights Committee, Campagna per la
Riforma della Banca Mondiale and Platform
took part in the mission,which visited the
Turkish section of the Baku Ceyhan pipeline.
A report on their detention is available -
contact Nick Hildyard for more
information.
Contact: Nick Rau 020 7566 1714 Roger
Higman 020 7566 1661 (m) 07780 661807 Nick
Hildyard, Corner House, 01258 473795
|