>
>  UKOOA (UK Oil Overthrow Association)
>
>  News release 9am Monday, January 4, 1999
>
>  Shell: Head Office Occupied
>  Activists give taste of protests to come
>
>  At 9am environmental and human rights protesters began occupying
>  management offices in Shell-Mex House, The Strand, London. The activists
>  are barricaded into the offices and are refusing to leave. This is in
>  solidarity with indigenous resistance to oil giant Royal Dutch/Shell in
>  Nigeria and to give a foretaste of direct action to come.
>
>  Today is the first day of work in the last year before the new
>  Millenium. The activists have chosen this day to send a message to Shell
>  and other transnational corporations that 1999 will be a year of
>  increased globalisation of protest, and the turning point that they say
>  will see the end of corporate dominance.
>
>  January 4 is also Ogoni Day, celebrated since 1993 when Shell was forced
>  from Ogoni in the oil-rich Niger Delta by non-violent mass mobilisation.
>  Throughout 1997-98, occupations of oil facilities by the Ijaw ethnic
>  group of southern Nigeria have grown in number and degree, cutting
>  Nigeria=92s oil output by up to one third. Now the Ijaws have told Shell
>  and other oil companies to quit their land by January 11, 1999 - or face
>  eviction by the people. Killings by
>  Shell-backed troops have already claimed the lives of at least 20 Ijaws
>  since the first deadline expired on 30 December.
>
>  The protesters in London are demanding compliance with the Ijaw=92s
>  demands to leave their traditional lands and for an end to
>  corporate-backed military repression. Live footage of the protest will
>  be relayed directly from Shell's own offices to an internet website at
>  <<http://www.kemptown.org/shell>www.kemptown.org/shell> using a lap-top
>  computer and mobile phone.
>
>  A spokesperson said, "The violent militarisation of the oil producing
>  areas in Nigeria are indicative of the global militarisation of
>  commerce. Moreover, oil industry-derived climate change is causing more
>  global disruption, and restructuring and oil mergers are causing massive
>  job losses. Shell and the other oil transnationals are bad news for
>  everyone  ultimately even for shareholders. We call for no more oil."
>  Further information is available from (+44) (0171) 561 9146
>  Video footage of the protest, shot inside the building, may be available
>  from (+44) (0) 966 137925. You can also check out the website at
>  <<http://www.kemptown.org/shell>www.kemptown.org/shell>
>
>  ends
>
>
>
>  --
>  Monica Wilson     Essential Action
>  P.O. Box 19405, Washington, DC 20036, 202.387.8030, 202.234.5176 (fax)
>  [EMAIL PROTECTED]     http://www.essential.org/action/shell/



UKOOA (UK Oil Overthrow Association)

News release 9am Monday, January 4, 1999

Shell: Head Office Occupied
Activists give taste of protests to come

At 9am environmental and human rights protesters began occupying
management offices in Shell-Mex House, The Strand, London. The activists
are barricaded into the offices and are refusing to leave. This is in
solidarity with indigenous resistance to oil giant Royal Dutch/Shell in
Nigeria and to give a foretaste of direct action to come.

Today is the first day of work in the last year before the new
Millenium. The activists have chosen this day to send a message to Shell
and other transnational corporations that 1999 will be a year of
increased globalisation of protest, and the turning point that they say
will see the end of corporate dominance.

January 4 is also Ogoni Day, celebrated since 1993 when Shell was forced
from Ogoni in the oil-rich Niger Delta by non-violent mass mobilisation.
Throughout 1997-98, occupations of oil facilities by the Ijaw ethnic
group of southern Nigeria have grown in number and degree, cutting
Nigeria=92s oil output by up to one third. Now the Ijaws have told Shell
and other oil companies to quit their land by January 11, 1999 - or face
eviction by the people. Killings by
Shell-backed troops have already claimed the lives of at least 20 Ijaws
since the first deadline expired on 30 December.

The protesters in London are demanding compliance with the Ijaw=92s
demands to leave their traditional lands and for an end to
corporate-backed military repression. Live footage of the protest will
be relayed directly from Shell's own offices to an internet website at
<<http://www.kemptown.org/shell>www.kemptown.org/shell> using a lap-top
computer and mobile phone.

A spokesperson said, "The violent militarisation of the oil producing
areas in Nigeria are indicative of the global militarisation of
commerce. Moreover, oil industry-derived climate change is causing more
global disruption, and restructuring and oil mergers are causing massive
job losses. Shell and the other oil transnationals are bad news for
everyone  ultimately even for shareholders. We call for no more oil."
Further information is available from (+44) (0171) 561 9146
Video footage of the protest, shot inside the building, may be available
from (+44) (0) 966 137925. You can also check out the website at
<<http://www.kemptown.org/shell>www.kemptown.org/shell>

ends



--
Monica Wilson     Essential Action
P.O. Box 19405, Washington, DC 20036, 202.387.8030, 202.234.5176 (fax)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]     http://www.essential.org/action/shell/




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