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Ugandans Sue TotalEnergies For Reparations In France

Twenty-six Ugandans on Tuesday sued French oil giant TotalEnergies in Paris for reparations over alleged human rights violations at its…

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On Tuesday, 26 Ugandans filed a lawsuit against French oil firm TotalEnergies in Paris seeking damages for alleged abuses of their human rights at the company’s vast megaprojects there.

People from the impacted villages, joined by five French and Ugandan humanitarian organizations, claim that the energy company caused “serious harm,” especially to their rights to land and food.

The Tilenga exploration of 419 oil wells, with a third of them located in Uganda’s largest national park, Murchison Falls, and EACOP, a 1,500-kilometer (930-mile) pipeline that transports crude oil to the Tanzanian coast through a number of protected nature reserves, are at the centre of their complaint before the Paris court.

People affected by the work “have been deprived of free use of their land for three or four years, in violation of their property rights”, the associations said in a statement.

This “deprived them of their means of subsistence” and led to “serious food shortages” for some families — with only some receiving in-kind compensation while others were offered financial terms “far short” of what was needed.

Some villages suffered flooding caused by construction at the Tilenga project’s oil treatment plant, the associations further alleged.

What’s more, “several plaintiffs suffered threats, harassment and arrest simply for daring to criticise oil projects in Uganda and Tanzania and defend the rights of affected communities,” they added.

Two activists, Jealousy Mugisha and Fred Mwesigwa, travelled to France for a 2019 case that aimed to require Total to watch out for potential rights violations.

“When they returned to Uganda one was arrested at the airport and the other attacked at his home 10 days later,” the NGOs said.

A third, Maxwell Athura, said he faced “threats and intrusions at his home” and was “arbitrarily arrested twice in 2022”.

“By falling short in its duty of vigilance, Total caused serious harm to the plaintiffs, especially to their rights to land and food. They are therefore requesting the company be ordered to compensate them,” the statement continued.

The groups say that more than 118,000 people have had their land wholly or partially expropriated because of the two TotalEnergies projects.

“It is unacceptable that foreign oil companies continue to make extraordinary profits while communities affected by their projects in Uganda are harassed, displaced, poorly compensated and living in abject poverty on their own land,” said Frank Muramuzi, executive director of Friends of the Earth’s Ugandan branch and local NGO NAPE.

The associations say TotalEnergies should have been aware of potential serious rights violations linked to its Ugandan plans, but the firm “did not act when warned they existed and did not implement corrective measures once the human rights violations occurred”.

There had been “no steps addressing population displacements, limits to people’s access to their means of subsistence or threats against human rights defenders in Total’s plans from 2018 to 2023,” they allege.

Friends of the Earth and four Ugandan associations failed in a 2019 bid before a French court to force TotalEnergies to halt Tilenga and EACOP.

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