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Human rights |
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| Backgrounder
on ExxonMobil Activities Acheh |
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| A teen,
a victim of military operation
during DOM; human rights groups believe the military
operation was helped by ExxonMobil. Authorities have
perpetrated over hundred of rapes since 1989. |
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| IFA, June, 2001 ——
ExxonMobil is "morally, politically and legally
responsible for crimes against humanity in Acheh"(1); "Exxon Mobil's less-than-arm's length detachment from
the military must be judged a short-term gain and a long-term miscalculation"(2);
"Rather than cut and
run from trouble spots, we will work to change them." - ExxonMobil
Op-ed |
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| THE
INTERNATIONAL FORUM FOR ACEH |
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'The crimes occurred over a long
period of time. Mobil Oil cannot utter the words, `We didn't
know'.' ——
FAISAL PUTRA, an attorney
in Lhokseumawe

'Evidence indicates that
ExxonMobil can not credibly pretend it does not know that
security operations undertaken in response to its
"security concerns" will continue and even
increase such violations.'
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HEN
ARTICLES IN THE Winter of 1998, in BusinessWeek and The
Boston Globe, reported that Achenese non-governmental
organizations had accused ExxonMobil Corporation (then Mobil
Oil) of "human rights abuses" in Acheh, Mobil
Indonesia executive vice president, Neil Duffin, responded:
"I can frankly say that we have no knowledge of that
happening".
A former ExxonMobil
employee debunked ExxonMobil's claim: "There wasn't a
single person in Acheh who didn't know that massacres were
taking place", says H. Sayed Mudhahar, a former public
relations manager for P.T. Arun. Faisal Putra, an attorney
in Lhokseumawe who intends to sue Mobil on behalf of
victims, agrees: "The crimes occurred over a long
period of time. Mobil Oil cannot utter the words, `We didn't
know'."
This backgrounder and the
documentation cited in appendix A below illustrates the
degree to which ExxonMobil can not use the defense of
professed ignorance to avoid responsibility for the
predictable impacts of its current security arrangements
with the Indonesian military and police in North Acheh,
Indonesia.
The accusations, which
surfaced in 1998, allege that ExxonMobil's wholly owned
subsidiary, Mobil Oil Indonesia (MOI), "provided
crucial logistic support to the army", that buildings
and facilities for Post A13 and Rancong, provided by MOI,
were used (by the military) for interrogating and torturing
local people, that the company's excavators were used to dig
mass graves for military victims in the Sentang and
Tengkorak hills, and that its roads were used to bring
victims to the mass graves. So far 14 mass graves have been
identified. One is on Pertamina-owned land less than four
kilometers from a Mobil gas-drilling site. Pertamina is
ExxonMobil's production sharing partner in the PT Arun gas
operations, in North Acheh district of the Indonesian
province of Acheh.**
Evidence indicates that
ExxonMobil can not credibly pretend it does not know that
security operations undertaken in response to its
"security concerns" will continue and even
increase such violations. This evidence may be found in
documents prepared by U.S. government sources,
well-respected international human rights organizations,
such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, and in
reports of Special Rapporteurs from the office of the UN
High Commission for Human Rights provided below.***
This backgrounder
documents that the Indonesian army and police, in North
Acheh, continue to commit systematic human rights violations
for which they were notorious under the dictator Suharto. In
fact, human rights violations throughout Acheh seem to have
increased since the informal end of the eight-year military
operations (DOM) in August 1998. The armed forces of
Indonesia might appear to outside observers as a caricature
of terror and brutality; but their impacts on the local
populations are deadly.
The documentation below
also helps us to understand the root causes of extreme
violence in Acheh. On March 12, 2001, the government of
Abdurrahman Wahid, under pressure from the military, gave
the go-ahead to the Indonesian Armed Forces, the TNI, to
launch a ‘limited security operation’ in Acheh. Three
days before, ExxonMobil, which oversees the operations at
the massive Arun gas fields in Acheh, had announced that it
was suspending operations because of the security situation.
The deployment of thousands of additional troops in Acheh
justified on the pretext of providing security for
ExxonMobil means that thousands more troops are competing to
supplement inadequate salaries by taking on non-military
work - some of it legal and some of it illegal. The official
2000 defense-and-security budget was "according to the
Minister of Defense, only sufficient to cover about 25 per
cent of minimal operating costs."
Any objective analysis of
the reports referred to below must conclude that the
worsening situation is due to an increase in armed
operations against insurgents - the Free Acheh Movement or
GAM, which the military claim to be launching to guarantee
the territorial integrity of Indonesia. However, the
increase in offensive operations are in significant measure
likely the result of an ongoing violent rivalry between the
military and police for access to lucrative opportunities in
legal and illegal business. These opportunities in Acheh -
especially around the highly profitable gas operations of
ExxonMobil, provide ample incentive to the military and
police to avoid withdrawing inorganic forces from the
province. As evidenced by previous calls for security
officers to be held responsible for human rights abuses in
Acheh, made following a 1998 withdrawal, such a withdrawal
would also likely result in demands for accountability for
atrocities committed in Acheh. Accountability is something
that has yet to effect the military forces responsible for
atrocities in Acheh or East Timor.
The military and police
businesses in Acheh, include providing protection, extortion,
drug-running, illegal timber harvesting, illegal fishing,
illegal mining, and prostitution, are in competition with
each other. As a result of this competition, the military
and police, often in collusion with civilian government
officials, have generated violent disturbances to justify
military or police "solutions" to non-existent
threats. The International Crisis Group reported in
September 2000, that "(i)t is often claimed that
military units exploit the opportunities available in
disturbed regions, to supplement their incomes, especially
by offering protection services." The report found that
these claims can not be dismissed out of hand and the
documentation of a "rivalry" between the police
and military below supports the theory that the security
problems for ExxonMobil are due in large part to causes
other than insurgency threats.
The shutting down of
operations in Acheh has serious repercussions for the
Indonesian economy.*** ExxonMobil has shown that
it has the power to place conditions on the Indonesian
government and armed forces before it is willing to resume
operations. Munir, a well-respected human rights lawyer,
observed the effect of the shutdown, stating " (t)his
stopping of production gives the government the perfect
excuse to bring in the military". Why doesn't
ExxonMobil insist on an end to human rights abuses by the
Indonesian armed forces around its facilities as a condition
of resuming operations?
The security operations
have already had predictable lethal results for the local
population. A report dated December 13, 2000, found that
villagers from five villages around Point A of ExxonMobil's
operations had complained to ExxonMobil that violent
incidents had increased since the company hired 100
Indonesian soldiers to guard the point. On May 15, 2001, the
Sydney Morning Herald reported that "troops bashed two
Indonesian journalists in front of a mosque…in North
Acheh." The story went on to detail a recent attack by
soldiers who had "killed a four-month old baby by
pouring boiling water over him, attacked other villagers and
looted everything of value." The United States Agency
for International Development cited a report that one week
prior to this incident, "the office of the Acheh chapter
of the national human rights commission in Banda Acheh was
shot at…by a group of police on patrol." The same
week, The Jakarta Post reported that Diswanda Wahyu, a
fifteen year old boy, who had been taken into police custody
on Friday, was found dead with (a) gunshot wound on
Saturday". On April 18th, the Associated
Press reported that government forces killed a five-year old
girl and her father, when, according to a witness,
paramilitary policemen "fired blindly".
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'Having silently accepted the pretext for more
military to come to Acheh to provide "security" for
its business activities, ExxonMobil is liable. Because
ExxonMobil continues to pay Indonesian military and police
to provide security for its operations, it is doubly liable.' |
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ExxonMobil:
Part of the Solution or Part of the Problem?
The
following documentation raises serious questions about
ExxonMobil's culpability for widespread human rights abuses,
committed in the past. Specifically, this backgrounder seeks
to outline the history of human rights violations in Acheh,
in and around the main areas of ExxonMobil's business
activities. As a result, we hope to have illustrated the
need for it to review its security arrangements and to put
the corporation on notice for future abuses.
The
documentation referred to in appendices below, all available
to ExxonMobil's executives and their spokespersons,
indicates that ExxonMobil has had clear and compelling
evidence available to it, at least since 1992, that serious
and widespread human rights violations by Indonesian
security forces were occurring in Acheh. Furthermore, the
sources cited below offer a clear indictment of ExxonMobil
for its "complicity of silence" about the primary
cause of human rights abuses: namely, the Indonesian
security forces, a large contingent of which are hired to
provide security to ExxonMobil's operations in the district
of North Acheh. Having silently accepted the pretext for more
military to come to Acheh to provide "security" for
its business activities, ExxonMobil is liable. Because
ExxonMobil continues to pay Indonesian military and police
to provide security for its operations, it is doubly liable.
The documents indicate that justified grievances by locals
against ExxonMobil are probably underreported. The
corruption of the Indonesian justice system is well known.
In the United States, where the court system is generally
acceptable, the corporation entered into a costly litigation
battle, which resulted in ExxonMobil being found guilty of
"trying to cheat the state out of oil royalties".
Jurors levied punitive fines of $3.4 billion dollars against
the corporation based on internal corporate documents that
"indicated Exxon was aware it was shortchanging the
state but thought it had enough muscle to get away with
it". The documents revealed that the company had "subject(ed)
the issue of whether (to) obey the law to dispassionate
cost-benefit analysis". Similar calculations and use of
"muscle" in Acheh are resulting in atrocities.
Under such conditions, Achenese villagers face one of the
most brutal militaries as well as the world's largest
corporation and scofflaw.
Those
activists seeking to bring ExxonMobil towards being a
responsible corporate actor can do the following:
- Join
the boycott of ExxonMobil being launched because of its
deceptive representations regarding global warming and
its refusal to invest in alternative energy (www.stopesso.com)
- Demand
that ExxonMobil keep its operations in Acheh closed until
they take steps - such as those outlined in the
Voluntary Principles on Security and Human Rights - to
minimize the risk of continued violation of the
fundamental human rights of the inhabitants of Acheh by
the armed forces it hires to provide security;
- Demand
that ExxonMobil publicly inform the Indonesian
government that continuation ExxonMobil operations are
subject to community consultation and approval in an
environment free of coercion;
- Demand
that ExxonMobil acknowledge publicly that its security
concerns include the security of the inhabitants of Acheh
and their human rights, who suffer from the offensive
military and police patrols carried out from ExxonMobil
supplied facilities and bases;
- Demand
that, in situations of armed conflict, where no
non-coercive consultation is possible with the local
population, ExxonMobil end any and all oil or gas
exploration or extraction;
- Demand
that ExxonMobil accept the Voluntary Principles on
Security and Human Rights, to which Unocal, Shell,
Chevron, Texaco, Rio Tinto, Freeport MacMoran are
signatories, and develop a Code of Conduct which
integrates human rights and humanitarian law into
ExxonMobil's business policies and practices;
- Demand
that ExxonMobil support the International Right To Know
legislation proposed by the International Right to Know
Campaign. (IFA)
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Backgrounder
cont'd >>;
footnotes>> |
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| iNTERNET; BBC,
SMH, INDONESIA NETWORK.ORG,
MSNBC, US. Dept. of State, and HRW; related stories
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| LINKS
TO EXXONMOBIL's CASE
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| See
also news on ExxonMobil
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