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The
Associated Press reports that Robert F. Kennedy''s daughter has sided with
Ecuadorian Indians and farmers in their $27 billion environmental lawsuit
against oil giant Chevron, saying after visiting former Amazon drilling sites
that the case compares unfavorably to the 1989 Exxon Valdez tanker spill. Kerry
Kennedy, who is president of the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Human Rights,
toured parts of the Amazon province of Sucumbios by invitation of the
plaintiffs to witness ecological damage, promising to lobby hard back in the
United States by calling on political leaders in the United States to
investigate Chevron and its practices. The plaintiffs, who say they represent
30,000 inhabitants of the region, are seeking damages for cleanup and to
compensate for illnesses they attribute to oil-drilling contamination from
operations carried out by Texaco. Chevron Corp., which bought Texaco in 2001,
says it was absolved of any liability by a 1998 agreement with Ecuador''s
government that followed a multimillion-dollar cleanup. The plaintiffs contend
the cleanup was a sham and say the agreement doesn''t protect Chevron from claims
by third parties. Chevron must be held responsible and compensate the local
populations, Kennedy told reporters in Ecuador''s capital, Quito. In a
statement, Chevron invited President John F. Kennedy''s niece to meet with its
representatives and learn the company''s side. Chevron accused the Ecuadorian
state oil company Petroecuador of being responsible for the damage, not Texaco.
Petroecuador was a partner in the drilling consortium Texaco operated before
pulling out in the 1990s. Chevron has long claimed it can''t get a fair trial in
Ecuador. It contends the judicial system is corrupt and recently released tapes
it claims implicate the judge in the case in a bribery scheme.
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