Home East Africa Climate Activists Urge Banks to Decline Lending to Uganda’s Kingfisher Project

Climate Activists Urge Banks to Decline Lending to Uganda’s Kingfisher Project

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The Kingfisher project is part of the East Africa Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) project

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CRI said “numerous women” reported sexual violence resulting from “threats, intimidation, or coercion by soldiers in the Kingfisher project area”. The Kingfisher project is part of the East Africa Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) project

Non-profit organization Climate Rights International (CRI) urges banks, financial institutions, and insurers to decline to provide further support for Uganda’s Kingfisher oil project. The group says it has documented widespread human rights abuses, and environmental damage at the site in eastern Uganda.

Importantly, a 156-page report was published on Monday (Sep. 02), based on 98 interviews. Families notably described “pressure and intimidation” by officials from TotalEnergies’s Ugandan subsidiary and its subcontractors to agree to low levels of compensation. that was inadequate to buy replacement land.

CRI said “numerous women” reported sexual violence resulting from “threats, intimidation, or coercion by soldiers in the Kingfisher project area”. The Kingfisher project is part of the East Africa Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) project.

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Chinese CNOOC operates the Kingfisher field on behalf of the Joint Venture Partners French TotalEnergies E&P and Uganda National Oil Company. Brad Adams, executive director at Climate Rights International, said it was appalling that a project that is touted as bringing prosperity to the people of Uganda is instead leaving them the victims of violence, intimidation, and poverty.”