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Oil, British foreign energy policy and Middle East repression
British oil interests are tightly interlinked with our governments’ recent political and military support for Gaddafi’s regime. Libya’s oil reserves – the largest in Africa – long had Western companies drooling. Shell beat its competitors to the chase, signing a $1 billion gas contract in 2004 during Tony Blair’s first visit to Libya. After three…
24 Feb 2011 admin -
How BP made friends with Mu’ammar Gaddafi
On Monday, BP CEO Bob Dudley declared that “we remain committed to doing business” in Libya and stressed that offshore operations in the region were still open and continuing. That morning, stories of tanks crushing unarmed protestors in Benghazi and massacres by (British-built) sniper rifles had been front page news. As Dudley spoke, reports emerged of airstrikes targeting demonstrations…
23 Feb 2011 admin -
Terrible timing: BP announce drilling plans during Libyan “Day of Rage”
In the morning of Thursday 17 February, Libyan protestors responding to a callout for a Day of Rage began to fill the streets in Benghazi and other major cities. Over a hundred demonstrators had already been shot and wounded in previous days, but now the people broke through the barrier of fear. A crackdown ensued, with police…
21 Feb 2011 admin -
30 Minute Interview With Great Nigeria TV
PLATFORM researcher Ben Amunwa provides analysis of the conflict, politics and root causes of the Niger Delta crisis. Watch the full video here, and join the discussion by adding your comments below.
10 Feb 2011 admin -
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Threat of oil disaster in North Sea, says watchdog
Environmental Business
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Wikileaks cables reveal BP cover-up in Azerbaijan
New Wikileaks cables about another major offshore gas leak in the Caspian give a rare insight into how BP attempts to control the public narratives when it hits crisis and failure. Writing a book about the company’s Caucasus pipelines, we’ve been all over the region, digging for the truth behind these events. Now the sudden…
23 Dec 2010 admin