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The Richmond Greens Say:
"Stop Our Addiction on Oil"
Contra
Costa Times,
Tuesday Dec 10, 2002
ChevronTexaco polluted
Amazon, group says. Ecuadorean activists face an August 2003
deadline on filing $600 million lawsuit
By Rick Jurgens
SAN FRANCISCO - Three Ecuadorean activists came to the Bay
Area to cultivate public outrage against ChevronTexaco Corp.,
which they accuse of polluting the Amazon rain forest and poisoning
55,000 Indians.
"Texaco came to our home and destroyed our land, our
territory," Toribio Aguinda, a leader of the Cofan tribe,
told a news conference in downtown San Francisco on Monday afternoon.
The visit comes as the Indians and their international supporters
face an August 2003 deadline to file a lawsuit in Ecuador to
pursue $600 million in claims against ChevronTexaco. The local
company, which is moving its headquarters to San Ramon from
San Francisco, became part of the Ecuadorean dispute in October
2001, when Chevron acquired Texaco.
At issue are the activities of a ChevronTexaco subsidiary
that operated in Ecuador from 1972 until the early 1990s, looking
for petroleum reserves, drilling wells and transporting oil
through a pipeline. Texaco dumped waste oil and toxic chemicals
into open pits, streams and rivers, contaminating water, killing
livestock and poisoning residents, according to a class action
lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in New York City in 1993.
A ChevronTexaco spokesman rejected those claims. The lawsuit
"failed to present any credible scientific
evidence" to support its claims, Stan Luckoski, the spokesman,
said Monday. ChevronTexaco owned only a minority interest in
the Ecuadorean oil venture, conducted two environmental audits
of the project
and spent $40 million for a clean-up, he said.
The legal arena for the claims against ChevronTexaco shifted
to Ecuador last August when a federal appeals court dismissed
the 1993 lawsuit, ruling that the claims should be resolved
in an Ecuadorean court. The U.S. court conditioned its dismissal
on ChevronTexaco's promise not to seek to have the claims in
Ecuador thrown out of court as untimely.
In a teleconference Monday afternoon, Cristobal Bonifaz, a
lawyer for the Indians, accused ChevronTexaco of using delaying
tactics to exhaust his clients. International support had enabled
the Indians to keep their fight alive, he added.

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