UK/IVORY COAST: Dutch based company Trafigura signs agreement settlement with Ivorian government on toxic waste without accepting liability.
Record ID:
1548091
UK/IVORY COAST: Dutch based company Trafigura signs agreement settlement with Ivorian government on toxic waste without accepting liability.
- Title: UK/IVORY COAST: Dutch based company Trafigura signs agreement settlement with Ivorian government on toxic waste without accepting liability.
- Date: 14th February 2007
- Summary: (W1) ABIDJAN, IVORY COAST (FEBRUARY 3, 2007)(REUTERS) IVORY COAST PRESIDENT LAURENT GBAGBO ENTERS MEETING ROOM AND SHAKING HANDS MEDIA VARIOUS GBAGBO SHAKING HANDS PEOPLE LOOKING ON PRESIDENT GBAGBO SITTING DOWN TRAFIGURA REPRESENTATIVE ROALD GOETHE AND IVORIAN GOVERNMENT REPRESENTATIVE SIGNING THE CONTRACT ROALD GOETHE, TRAFIGURA REPRESENTATIVE SIGNING AGREEMENT IVORIAN GOVERNMENT REPRESENTATIVE SIGNING THE CONTRACT IVORIAN MINISTERS WATCHING THE SCENE GOETHE AND IVORIAN GOVERNMENT REPRESENTATIVE SHAKING HANDS AND EXCHANGING DOCUMENTS MEDIA PRESIDENT GBAGBO SHAKING HANDS WITH GOETHE AFTER THE SIGNING SOUNDBITE (French) IVORIAN PRESIDENT LAURENT GBAGBO, SAYING: ''My preoccupation, it is that the people are damaged, it is that the state is damaged. These are my two preoccupations, and our friends of the Trafigura group reached our demands.'' AGREEMENT SCENE SOUNDBITE (French) IVORIAN PRESIDENT LAURENT GBAGBO, SAYING: ''I would like to tell the of the Ivory Coast that it is a good agreement, that allows us to cope, that permits the state to face the damage of all those that have been touched, and that need help since ask the damage. Therefore we have here today by this agreement, the means of the helping.'' IVORIAN PRESIDENT LAURENT GBAGBO SHAKING HANDS WITH GOETHE
- Embargoed: 1st March 2007 17:03
- Keywords:
- Topics: Disasters / Accidents / Natural catastrophes,Nature / Environment
- Reuters ID: LVA2H3DU45VM9QO19INQLJZYH12S
- Aspect Ratio: 4:3
- Story Text: Dutch based company Trafigura has agreed to pay nearly two million US dollars to the government of the Ivory Coast which it expects will precipitate the release of their colleague held in jail in the capital Abidjan.
Dutch-based oil trader Trafigura said on Tuesday it would pay a 100 billion CFA franc ($198 million) settlement to Ivory Coast after thousands of people fell ill when waste was unloaded from a ship it sent there.
The money will be used largely to reimburse costs the state incurred for removing the waste and treating those affected after the black sludge was dumped in open-air sites around the Ivorian economic capital Abidjan last August.
At least 10 people were killed after exposure to fumes from the waste and thousands sought medical attention for nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea and breathing difficulties.
Neither Trafigura nor the Ivory Coast government accept any liability for August's events, the company said in a statement.
"The facts are very clear that the material that was discharged in Abidjan was not toxic at all. And that has been confirmed absolutely by the analysis that has been provided by both the Dutch authority as well as international laboratory. So clearly the company has respected all the international legislation in that matter. And we are doing that essentially as a matter of corporate responsibility," Trafigura director Eric de Turckheim told Reuters.
Trafigura says it entrusted the waste to a state-registered Ivorian company, Tommy, which was set up shortly before the tanker which it chartered, the Panamanian-registered Probo Koala, arrived in Abidjan.
President Laurent Gbagbo, who attended the ceremony, said some of the cash would be used to compensate the victims of the waste and he called for definitive lists of names to be established in order for this to be done.
The British courts agreed earlier this month to hear a class action case brought against Trafigura by law firm Leigh Day & Co which is seeking cash compensation for what it estimates are around 4,000-5,000 people who were injured by the waste.
Lawyer Martyn Day from the firm said the civil case would proceed until the victims had been paid the full value of their claims.
"If our clients were to receive something from this we would be delighted and this would be an interim payment offset against the value of each individual's claim," he told Reuters by telephone.
Trafigura said in a statement on Tuesday that its director and West African regional director, who have been held in Abidjan's prison since September and face charges under Ivorian poisoning and toxic waste laws, were due to be released.
"Well obviously we welcome the news of the expected release of our colleagues. It's an important news for us, it's very emotional for us as a company, for the colleague and for the families," said de Turckheim.
However the chief of staff to the justice minister, Aly Yeo, told Reuters an application for the pair to be released had not been decided upon but would possibly be examined this week.
Trafigura said it planned to fund an independent environmental audit in Abidjan, encompassing the role of the parties involved and the impact on the local community. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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