Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts

Friday 24 May 2013

Nigerian Journalist, Ameto Akpe Named 2013 Persephone Miel Fellow

Nigerian Journalist, Ameto Akpe Named 2013 Persephone Miel Fellow

























Nigerian Journalist, Ameto Akpe has been adjudged the 2013 Persephone Miel Fellowship winner; this was announced by The Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.
Launched in October 2010 in a collaboration between the Pulitzer Center and Inter news, the $7,500 fellowship supports an international journalist to report on a systemic global issue in his or her home country. The fellowship also provides support from the Pulitzer Center for editorial oversight, multimedia development, outreach and assistance with placement in U.S. news media outlets.
Meanwhile, the group says it received more than 165 applications for the fellowship from nearly 80 countries.
Congrats.

Thursday 23 May 2013

Ogoni Activist Takes Environmental Pollution Protest to Shell Stakeholders Meeting in London

Ogoni Activist Takes Environmental Pollution Protest to Shell Stakeholders Meeting in London
Celestine AkpoBari Nkabari, an environmental activist and human rights defender from Ogoniland in the Niger Delta presented Peter Voser, the soon to retire CEO of Shell, with a champagne bottle containing polluted water from his home and invite him to attend a retirement party in the Niger Delta, in recognition of the massive pollution that Shell has caused during its decades of operation in Ogoniland.
The protest comes almost two years after a damning report by the UN concluded that a succession of oil spills by Shell in Ogoniland over half a century will require $1bn start-up finance and take 35 years to clean up. One of the report’s findings was that communities’ drinking water was contaminated with dangerous concentrations of benzene and other pollutants. Celestine, who is from Ogoniland and works directly with impacted communities, had planned to travel to The Hague to attend Shell’s AGM but was denied a visa after stating his intention to attend the AGM.
Celestine said: “I have travelled all the way from the Niger Delta to ask Shell what it has been doing in the past two years since the UN report established their responsibility for the devastating pollution in my homeland. We see no evidence of Shell starting the clean-up. The only evidence that we see is the oil in our water, the smoke in our air, the crops that die and our livelihoods and culture that are destroyed. All the things that Ken Saro-Wiwa was fighting for, we are still fighting for them. While Peter Voser is retiring to spend more time with his family, in Ogoniland we are still fighting for a livable environment for our families.”
Meanwhile, two climate activist groups, Platform London and UK Tar Sands Network have also joined the solidarity campaign at the Shell’s Stakeholders Meeting.

Source: Ogoninews
Ogoni Activist Takes Environmental Pollution Protest to Shell Stakeholders Meeting in London

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