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Big Business Keeps Eye on Historic Human Rights Case
News Feature
By Anna Sussman, Pacific News Service
A trial date has been set for a court case watched closely by CEOs
and Third World villagers alike. Doe vs. Unocal would hold a corporation
liable for the actions of state security forces it hires to protect its
projects in the developing world.
Nov 19, 2004 - For the first time ever, an American company will be
put on trial for human rights abuses committed by a government with
which it did business.
Unocal, the $11 billion California oil giant, is accused of being
'vicariously liable' for the rape, torture, murder and enslavement of
villagers by the company's hired security forces along the site of an
oil pipeline built with Unocal's help in southern Burma in the 1990s.
"Unocal had nothing to do with any human rights abuses whatsoever," says
Daniel Petrocelli, the company's defense counsel. Unocal, he says, did
"everything in its power to prevent even the potential for any abuses
accruing" in connection with the pipeline project.
The "vicarious liability" charge specifies that the defendant was aware
of crimes being committed within its auspices, and did nothing to stop
them.
The federal case, Doe vs. Unocal, marks the first time a multi-national
corporation could be legally bound to international human rights law,
and its outcome is being closely watched by human rights advocates and
business leaders alike.
The plaintiffs also filed a case in California state court in 2000,
arguing that Unocal's forced labor practices violated California
business law. A trial date was recently set for June 21, 2005, in
California civil court. If found guilty in either case, Unocal will be
forced to pay an award to the villagers.
"The mere fact that we've gotten this far has had a very positive effect
on corporations and how they conduct their business," says Dan Stormer,
lawyer for the plaintiffs. "The existence of the case, and the successes
that we've had, has held Unocal and other corporations up to public
scrutiny."
Hundreds of American businesses are arguing that the case will harm U.S.
business interests. USA*Engage, a coalition of over 600 corporations, as
well as lawyers for President Bush, have filed briefs on behalf of
Unocal, arguing that if the matter is not dismissed its continuation
could deter future economic engagement with foreign countries, and that
similar cases could impede the war on terror by condemning governments
that are otherwise on good terms with the United States.
"The Bush administration has been very, very hostile toward this and
other similar cases," says plaintiffs' lawyer Judith Chomsky.
The case rests on the Alien Tort Claims Act, a 1789 law
originally used to prosecute pirates in international waters.
Since the 1980s, the law has been used to uphold human rights law
against individuals responsible for massacre and torture abroad. The
Unocal case will be the first time the law is used to sue a company.
Bill Reinsch, president of the American Foreign Trade Council said he is
concerned about using U.S. courts to fight wrongs committed by other
people, in other countries. "We are dealing with U.S. law and the way
the founding fathers wrote it," he says, arguing that the Tort Claims
act was not intended to address human rights
issues. "We shouldn't go around ignoring that because we have a
sympathetic case."
One of the plaintiffs, Jane Doe, has testified that her husband was shot
when attempting to flee forced labor on the pipeline, and that her baby
was killed when thrown into a fire in retaliation for his attempted
escape. All 12 plaintiffs remain anonymous for fear of repercussions
against them and their family members.
The case has become a sort of poster child for a long line of similar
cases against multinational corporations and the security forces they
often use to protect their projects in the developing world. A group of
Nigerians are trying to sue Chevron for the murder of protestors at
Chevron's Parabe offshore platform and the destruction of villages in
the oil-rich Niger Delta region. Eleven villagers from Aceh,
Indonesia, are suing Exxon Mobil, and a group of labor leaders from
Colombia are suing an Alabama-based mining corporation on behalf of the
families of slain workers.
David Vogel, business professor at University of California, Berkeley,
and author of "Kindred Strangers: The Uneasy Relationship Between
Politics and Business in America," says that past efforts to get
corporations to follow human rights law mostly sought voluntary
corporate compliance. "What makes these cases unusual," Vogel says, "is
that they actually attempt to use the legal system to improve U.S.
corporate standards."
The Unocal case was born 10 years ago when a Burmese refugee
approached a young American law student in Thailand. The refugee said
that hundreds of Burmese villagers where fleeing forced labor on an oil
pipeline being built with the help of an American company, and asked if
the U.S. legal system could help. The law student brought the question
back to lawyers in the United States, and they began to plan the case.
The business community fears that the case could leave Americans on the
sidelines of lucrative ventures, including oil markets. "We do not want
a group of folks who have differing points of views to stand in the way
of the rights that companies have to conduct business where they believe
it makes most sense to conduct business," explains Unocal lawyer Daniel
Petrocelli. "Otherwise we'll become an isolated economy, and that's of
course inimical to the values that this country has always espoused,
which is to press ahead to the next frontier and engage the world."
Burmese villagers still living near the pipeline site say that as the
case progresses there is less use of forced labor, according to Burmese
activist Ka Hsaw Wa, of EarthRights International. "The pipeline
operators, the military and corporations and the villagers all listen to
news about the case on the radio. The majority of people know about the
case over there," Wa says.
PNS contributor Anna Sussman covers Burma and
Southeast Asia for radio and print outlets. She is a student at U.C.
Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism. |