Vous êtes ici : Accueil » Afrique centrale » Ouganda » Crackdown on Pipeline Protesters in Uganda

Crackdown on Pipeline Protesters in Uganda

D 9 novembre 2023     H 06:00     A Human Rights Watch     C 0 messages


Environmental defenders and anti-fossil fuel activists in Uganda have been raising concerns over a planned oil pipeline in East Africa.

Authorities are responding with harassment, threats, and unjustified arrests.

The planned East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) is one of the most significant fossil fuel infrastructure projects under development globally, and one of the most controversial fossil fuel projects in the world. It will include hundreds of wells, hundreds of kilometers of roads, camps and other infrastructure – and a pipeline stretching 1,443 kilometers.

Of course, just from the perspective of the climate crisis alone, any such project is a bad idea. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the world’s leading authority on climate science, and others have warned against any new fossil fuel projects if the world is to reach Paris Agreement goals and limit the worst impacts of climate change.

Activists in Uganda have been drawing attention not only to these global concerns but also to local ones. More than 100,000 people in Uganda and Tanzania will lose their land for the oil developments.

But those who protest both the construction of the pipeline and the treatment of people caught up in its path, have faced the wrath of those in power. Ugandan authorities have routinely detained and arrested activists and human rights defenders on politically-motivated charges.

This harassment is not just wrong in itself - there are other impacts too. Activists says the constant threats from local government and security officials make it more difficult to provide support to those who have lost land.

The French fossil-fuel giant TotalEnergies is the operator and majority shareholder of the project, alongside China National Offshore Oil Company, and the state-run Ugandan and Tanzanian oil companies. However, financing for the pipeline is apparently yet to be finalized.

Given the grave environmental and human rights risks in the pipeline’s construction and operation, financial institutions and insurance companies should avoid supporting it.

Rechercher

Les plus lus

1.  ALIMENTATION : Réduire la faim, soutenir les femmes agricultrices

2.  Déclaration à propos de la menace du gouvernement britannique de priver d’aide les pays qui violent les droits des personnes LGBTI en Afrique

3.  Angola : Isabel dos Santos, Honour and Lies

4.  La voix des Sahraouis étouffée au cœur de l’Europe

5.  Botswana : LABOUR TRANSFORMATION, THE DYNAMICS AND CHALLENGES IN A DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY


5 articles au hasard

1.  Djibouti : Deux blessés très graves à Yoboki et des dizaines d’autres après une intervention musclée des forces militaires locales

2.  Mali : de jeunes Dogons et Peuls unis contre les violences

3.  Burkina Faso : L’échec de l’intervention de l’armée française au Sahel et l’héritage de Compaoré

4.  togo : CAP 2015 et les forces démocratiques invitent le Chef de l’Etat à prendre en compte la situation sociopolitique du pays

5.  Djibouti : « L’échec ou la réussite d’un pays est indexé à la performance de son système éducatif »


Les plus populaires

1.  La liberté de la presse en berne au Burkina Faso : suspension de 9 sites en 48h portant à 13 le nombre de médias n’ayant plus droit de cité dans le pays

2.  Crowded camps and local aid : How DR Congo’s M23 conflict is impacting Goma

3.  NUMSA’s Political Perspectives on the Crisis of Leadership in the ANC and SA

4.  Cameroon : a Marxist approach to the national crisis

5.  Guinée : Sur la dissolution du FNDC