Houston, we have no problem, but we need a moving van... or a fleet of C5-As:
http://www.pbase.com/ralf/image/30391812

Houston, May 15, 2007: CorpWatch and its partners today released an
alternative annual report on Halliburton titled: "Goodbye Houston"

The new report was prepared in association with Halliburton Watch and
the Oil & Gas Accountability Project.

http://corpwatch.org/article.php?id=14482


The new report (the fourth in the series) is being issued on the eve
of Halliburton 's annual general meeting in Woodlands, Texas, on
Wednesday, May 16th, 2007.

An in-depth, hard-hitting report, "Goodbye Houston," provides a
detailed look at Halliburton's military and energy operations around
the world as well as its political connections. It includes a series
of recommendations for the company and its shareholders as well as for
the United States policymakers.

Halliburton is one of the 10 largest contractors to the U.S. military.
It has earned over $20 billion from the U.S.military in war-related
contracts in Iraq since the March 2003 invasion. This cash bonanza may
well be over because of the cancelation of its two most lucrative
contracts: oil infrastructure reconstruction and military base
support.

"With the loss of its two biggest taxpayer-funded contracts in Iraq,
Halliburton has decided that its future lies outside the United
States. The company decision to move its headquarters to Dubai could
spell a major financial loss to the U.S. Treasury," says Pratap
Chatterjee, co-director of CorpWatch.

"Given the multiple ongoing investigations into Halliburton 's alleged
wrongdoing, policymakers should closely scrutinize Halliburton 's
latest move, and whether it will allow the company to further elude
accountability," said Charlie Cray, co-director of Halliburton Watch
and director of the Center for Corporate Policy. "Moreover, this
underscores the need for Congress to bar companies that have broken
the law, or avoided paying taxes, from receiving federal contracts."

"Goodbye Houston" also documents

* how Halliburton may have broken the law by employing private
security guards like Blackwater and Triple Canopy; the Triple Canopy
guards have been alleged to have shot at unarmed Iraqis for sport

* Halliburton truck drivers allege the company failed to adequately
protect them in Iraq

* new military audits which show deliberate concealment of high overheads

* new lawsuits allege that company management in Iraq and Kuwait
knowingly wasted millions of dollars of taxpayers dollars

Today as the military slows its purchases of Halliburton services in
Iraq, the company is diversifying into such profitable areas the
provision of direct services to the oil and gas industry abroad.

* Halliburton has finally admitted that its executives may have been
involved in bribery and political meddling Nigeria

* Halliburton 's hydraulic fracturing operations in the United States
have continued to have disastrous impacts on the environment,
including community water supplies

* Halliburton has been accused of substandard work on offshore
operations in Brazil, and is under investigation for no-bid contracts
in Algeria

--

Disclaimer:
This is not an offer to sell securities; use only in well-ventilated
area; keep away from fire or flame; not recommended for children; this
supersedes all previous notices; all trademarks remain the property of
their respective owners.

Reply via email to