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Oil and Indians Don't Mix

by: Greg Palast  |  GregPalast.com

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Indians in Yurimaguas, Peru, have blocked the road in an anti-government protest. (Photo: Karel Navarro / AP)

    There's an easy way to find oil. Go to some remote and gorgeous natural sanctuary, say Alaska or the Amazon, find some Indians, then drill down under them.

    If the indigenous folk complain, well, just shoo them away. Shooing methods include: bulldozers, bullets, crooked politicians and fake land sales.

    But be aware. Lately, the natives are shooing back. Last week, indigenous Peruvians seized an oil pumping station, grabbed the nine policemen guarding it and, say reports, executed them. This followed the government's murder of more than a dozen rain forest residents, who had protested the seizure of their property for oil drilling.

    Again and again, I see it in my line of work of investigating fraud. Here are a few pit stops on the oily trail of tears:

    In the 1980s, Charles Koch was found to have pilfered about $3 worth of crude from Stanlee Ann Mattingly's oil tank in Oklahoma. Here's the weird part. Koch was (and remains) the 14th richest man on the planet, worth about $14 billion. Stanlee Ann was a dirt-poor Osage Indian.

    Stanlee Ann wasn't Koch's only victim. According to secret tape recordings of a former top executive of his company, Koch Industries, the billionaire demanded that oil tanker drivers secretly siphon a few bucks worth of oil from every tank attached to a stripper well on the Osage Reservation where Koch had a contract to retrieve crude.

    Koch, according to the tape, would "giggle" with joy over the records of the theft. Koch's own younger brother Bill ratted him out, complaining that, in effect, brothers Charles and David cheated him out of his fair share of the looting, which totaled over three-quarters of a billion dollars from the native lands.

    The FBI filmed the siphoning with hidden cameras, but criminal charges were quashed after quiet objections from Republican senators.

    Then there are the Chugach natives of Alaska. The Port of Valdez, Alaska, is arguably one of the most valuable pieces of real estate on earth, the only earthquake-safe, ice-free port in Alaska that could load oil from the giant North Slope field. In 1969, Exxon and British Petroleum companies took the land from the Chugach and paid them one dollar. I kid you not.

    Wally Hickel, the former governor of Alaska, dismissed my suggestion that the Chugach deserved a bit more respect (and cash) for their property. "Land ownership comes in two ways, Mr. Palast." explained the governor and pipeline magnate, "Purchase or conquest. The fact that your granddaddy chased a caribou across the land doesn't make it yours." The Chugach had lived there for 3,000 years.

    No oil company would dream of digging on the Bush family properties in Midland, Texas, without paying a royalty. Or drilling near Malibu without the latest in environmental protections. But when natives are on top of Exxon's or BP's glory hole, suddenly, the great defenders of private property rights turn quite Bolshevik: Lands can be seized for The Public's Need for Oil.

    Some natives are "re-located" through legal flim-flam, some at gunpoint. The less lucky are left to wallow, literally, in the gunk left by the drilling process.

    Chief Emergildo Criollo told me how oil company executives helicoptered into his remote village and, speaking in Spanish - which the Cofan didn't understand - "purchased" drilling rights with trinkets and cheese. The natives had never seen cheese. ("The cheese smelled funny, so we threw it in the jungle.")

    After drilling began, Criollo's son went swimming in his usual watering hole, came up vomiting blood and died.

    I asked Chevron about the wave of poisonings and deaths. According to an independent report, 1,401 deaths, mostly of children, mostly from cancers, can be traced to Chevron's toxic dumping.

    Chevron's lawyer told me, "And it's the only case of cancer in the world? How many cases of children with cancer do you have in the States? ... They have to prove that it is our crude," which, he noted with glee, "is absolutely impossible."

    Big Oil treats indigenous blood like a cheap gasoline additive. That's why the Peruvians are up in arms. The Cofan of Ecuador, unlike their brothers in Peru, have taken no hostages. Rather, they have heavily armed themselves with lawyers.

    But Chevron and its Big Oil brethren remain dismissive of the law. This week, Shell Oil, got rid of a nasty PR problem by paying $15 million to the Ogoni people and the family of Ken Saro-Wiwa for the oil giant's alleged role in the killing of Wiwa and his associates, activists who had defended these Nigeria Delta people against drilling contamination. Shell pocketed $31 billion last year in profits and hopes the payoff will clear the way for a drilling partnership with Nigeria's government.

    Congratulations, Shell. $15 million: For a license to kill and drill, that's a quite a bargain.

  

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Late last year I went to a

Late last year I went to a talk by an archeaologist who worked in New Guinea. Chinese immigrants moved in and were running office on the local level where they were able control oil and forest products that where exported back to China.

Greg Palast's writing style

Greg Palast's writing style is a superb way to illustrate how these thieves profit from the lands of people across the planet. Bold and to the point! Most first world peeps never think twice about it though. I haven't fueled at Shell since hearing about Ken Saro-Wiwa's death back in the nineties. Yet still we fight and kill over this petroleum! In solidarity to my fellow UAW brother....Keep up the fight!

Thank heavens for Greg

Thank heavens for Greg Palast. If he's powerless to do anything about these atrocities, then at least he can tell the world of them, giving hope that justice will come some day.

Greg: Great job! Keep up the

Greg: Great job! Keep up the fabulous work and reporting on these crucial issues of environmental justice. Hope you make it back to Link TV soon!

Greg Palast is great, but

Greg Palast is great, but how alone he seems in the tide of misdeeds. Where are we? I don't know what to do when I read these stories, it all seems so insurmountable when the powers in charge are way too uncontrolled for the big numbers of We the People. Just when we think we did something right and to change things, something else is done to us, making us run in circles. The answers are vast and I feel too small to help.

land grab, only if it is

land grab, only if it is indigenous land,the oil mafia strikes again.

SHELL OIL SHOULD BE RENAMED

SHELL OIL SHOULD BE RENAMED HELL OIL! AMERICANS NEED TO GET MORE SERIOUS ABOUT ALTERNATE FUELS OR MEANS OF TRANSPORT.

Greg's real stories make X

Greg's real stories make X Files sound like Pollyanna.

Greg, I have happily bought

Greg, I have happily bought a copy of each of your DVDs so far and have learned a lot. Are there more? When can we find them? Is there one about this very topic?