USA: Enviros Question Gore's Commitment
Enviros Question Gore's Commitment in a N.Y. Times Ad Expose V.P.'s "Deep Ties" to Occidental Petroleum
Gore Urged to Act in Defense of the U'wa People of Colombia
Escalating a campaign questioning Vice President Al Gore's environmental
commitment, environmental organizations today placed a full-page ad in the west coast edition of the New York Times. The ad, whose headline reads "Who is Al Gore? Environmental Champion or Petroleum Politician? The U'wa people need to know" substantiates Gore's connections to Occidental Petroleum and argues that the Vice President has a specific responsibility to act on behalf of the U'wa people.
The U'wa, a remote Colombian tribe, are engaged in a tense standoff with
Los-Angeles based Occidental Petroleum (Oxy) over the drilling of the Gibraltar 1 oil well. The U'wa, a deeply spiritual people who believe that oil is the "blood of mother earth", have repeatedly stated that they "are willing to die" to keep oil drilling off of their ancestral lands.
More than 2,500 local farmers, union members, and students have joined
thousands of U'wa and other indigenous peoples in non-violent blockades and protests near the well site to stop Oxy's project The heavy military presence around the oil project has already led to violence against peaceful indigenous peoples.In the last month, many have been injured and at least three have died. The situation remains very tense.
Gore has enjoyed the corporate sponsorship of Oxy throughout his
political career. He controls up to $500,000 in Oxy stocks and has received $20,000 a year for almost 30 years from mining rights to his land that Oxy never mined. Gore's father made a great deal of his wealth while working for Oxy and its ex-chairman, Armand Hammer. Gore Sr. sat on the
Board of Oxy for twenty-eight years. Since Gore was elected Vice
President, Oxy Chairman Ray Irani has given more than $400,000 to the Democratic Party.
Furthermore, a Gore initiative,"Reinventing Government" resulted in the sale of the Elk Hills Naval Petroleum Reserve to Occidental in 1998. The
unprecedented closed bidding process was the largest privatization of federal property in U.S. history, one that tripled Occidental's U.S. oil reserves overnight.
Environmental and human rights leaders have been attempting to direct the
Vice President's attention to this issue for years. In March 1998, the Amazon Coalition wrote the Vice President on this issue requesting his assistance. There was no reply. A month later a full-page ad in the New York Times generated hundreds of letters to Gore. Gore also met briefly
with the spokesman for the U'wa people, Berito Kuwaru'wa, after he
received the 1998 Goldman Environmental Prize.
Despite repeated attempts, Gore has consistently ducked the issue by
attempting both deny his connections to Oxy andclaim impotence.
In January, grassroots environmental activists from around the country
began targeting Gore at his campaign appearances. Eight were arrested at a sit-in at Gore's campaign headquarters over the U'wa issue in Manchester, New Hampshire. The Democratic debate at the Apollo Theatre was briefly
interrupted by protestors, and in Olympia Washington, U'wa supporters reportedly drowned out Gore supporters.
Just Saturday, activists in Boston disrupted yet another campaign rally. In all, organizers estimate that at leasttwenty-five campaign appearances over the last 6 weeks have been marred by protests around the U'wa issue. Activists continue to demand that Gore take action that results in
an immediate suspension of Oxy's project, and a significant reduction of
tension on the ground.
"We're not going to go away", said Steve Kretzmann of Amazon Watch. "As a
professed champion of the environment, Gore has a general moral obligation to take action in defense of the U'wa and their homeland. More importantly, as someone with deep ties and access to Occidental, Gore clearly has a specific duty to take action in this case. We won't
accept the excuse that he's powerless to stop this situation. As Vice
President of the United States, he has the power to make a difference".
Contact: Stephen Kretzmann, 510-551-7953 or Atossa Soltani, 310-317-7045
Lauren Sullivan, 415-398-4404 or Danny Kennedy, 510-705-8981
- 106 Money & Politics
- 107 Energy