-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.angelfire.com/id/ciadrugs/BurmaUnocal.html
<A HREF="http://www.angelfire.com/id/ciadrugs/BurmaUnocal.html">
http://www.angelfire.com/.../outline.html</A>
-----
Unocal accused in Federal Court of conspiring with narco-traffickers in
Burma

San Francisco Bay Guardian
April 23, 1997
by Dennis Bernstein and Leslie Kean
Los Angeles-based Unocal has become an active player in the expanding
global heroin trade as a result of the oil giant's business activity
with the narco-dictatorship of Burma (also known as Myanmar), according
to an affidavit filed as part of an ongoing federal lawsuit. The
affidavit - filed April 7 with the U.S. District Court in Los Angeles -
states that the government-controlled Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise
(MOGE) "has been the main channel for laundering the revenues of heroin
produced and exported under the control of the Burmese army." The legal
document was filed in support of a suit that seeks to hold Unocal - the
largest American investor in Myanmar - liable for widespread human
rights abuses allegedly committed by the Burmese regime. Francois Casani
er, an associate researcher for the Paris-based Geopolitical Drugwatch,
wrote the affidavit. Unocal and the French oil giant Total are partners
in a joint venture with MOGE to build a $1.2 billion gas pipeline
project through southern Burma. The 14 plaintiffs in the federal lawsuit
are ethnic minorities who live in the region where the pipeline is being
built. They charge that the Burmese military, in providing security and
infrastructure support for the pipeline's construction, is committing
human rights abuses, including forced labor, forced relocations, rape,
torture and killings.

A little-noticed March 25 ruling by Federal District Judge Richard A.
Paez held that Unocal and its executives could be held liable for
illegal and repressive actions committed by the Burmese government in
the course of their business dealings.

The court action, the first of its kind, was reported by several
newspapers in mid April. But the explosive contents of Casanier's
affidavit, which have received virtually no coverage, paint a disturbing
picture of an oil giant benefiting from the international drug trade.

According to a 1996 State Department report, Burma now supplies over 50%
of the world's heroin and 60% percent of the heroin sold in the United
States. "Drug traffickers and their families are among the leading
backers of high-profile infrastructure projects in Burma," said Robert
Gelbard, Assistant Secretary of State for International Narcotics and
Law Enforcement Affairs. "They launder their money with impunity in
banks controlled by the military," he says.

In announcing sanctions against Burma on April 22, President Clinton
stated "The regime has shown little political will to stop the narcotics
exports from Burma and prevent illicit drug money from enriching those
who would flaunt international rules and profit by destroying the lives
of millions. " These sanctions are not retroactive, and will not affect
companies like Unocal who are already invested in Burma.

The plaintiffs have submitted Casanier's sworn affidavit in support of a
request for a preliminary injunction that would prevent Unocal from
doing any further business in Burma pending the outcome of the case.

In his affidavit, the French researcher lays out a compelling case that
the foreign partners of Burma's ruling State Law and Order Restoration
Council (SLORC) provide "big shields for [the] money laundering" of drug
dollars. Casanier states that because "heroin has become the country's
highest valued export, accounting for 50 percent to 70 percent of the
cash flow into the country," money laundering strategies have become an
integral part of government operations.

"MOGE has transferred hundreds of millions of dollars into Singapore
banks since setting up the joint venture," states the affidavit by
Casanier, "[yet] it has no assets other than the installments of its
foreign partners and makes no profit."

According to Casanier's four year investigation, MOGE has been able to
purchase military hardware from Portugal and Poland, run embassies in
Europe, and invest in companies at home, all through the use of drug
money.

Randy Renick, an attorney with Hadsell & Stormer handling the federal
lawsuit, said that the drug allegations are directly related to human
rights aspects of the case because the military has used its extensive
arsenal, purchased with profits from the drug trade, against the Burma
people while protecting foreign investments. According to Renick,
Casanier's sworn declaration to the court "provides irrefutable evidence
that Unocal is in partnership with criminal drug dealers who are making
profits off the backs of the indigenous people of Burma."

In January, the SLORC launched a series of on-going military offensives
against the Karen and Mon, ethnic minorities living in the area
surrounding the pipeline, sending thousands of refugees fleeing into
Thailand. The Karen, who have been struggling for autonomy and democracy
in Burma for decades, have been hit particularly hard by the assaults.

"UNOCAL and TOTAL knew or should have known that MOGE has been heavily
involved in laundering the proceeds of SLORC's heroin trade," states
Casanier's affidavit, 'both at the time they originally contracted with
MOGE and in January of 1997 when they signed additional [business]
contracts."

In December - the month before Unocal signed those new contracts - a
Unocal shareholders' resolution based on the drug allegations was
introduced by the 90,000 member Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers
International Union (OCAW). The resolution calls for Unocal board
members to investigate whether MOGE is a drug money-laundering front for
the Burmese junta and also "the extent to which Company officials have
been aware of any facts linking MOGE to drug laundering."

Unocal's board of directors said that the company has yet to investigate
the money laundering allegations. "Proving or disproving these
allegations would require an investigation that is not only illegal but
would subject Unocal officers and directors to criminal penalties [in
Burma]," a board statement explained.

OCAW spokesperson Joe Drexler said he found that suggestion ridiculous.
"It is absurd that Unocal would be concerned about legalities of
conducting an investigation in a country controlled by an outlaw regime
which deals in drugs, violates international law continuously and
creates its own laws to suit its own purposes," Drexler said.

Both the Burmese government and Unocal deny all charges. "The charges
are politically motivated," said a spokesperson for the Burmese Embassy
in Washington, D.C., who asked not to be identified by name. "MOGE is a
state run company - run in accordance with rules and regulations - and
it can't do anything outside the law."

Barry Lane, a Unocal spokesperson in Los Angeles, said that the charges
are "absolutely false and outrageous...It's an insult to think we'd
involve ourselves in the drug trade." On March 5, Unocal was handed two
major setbacks by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC}. It
denied the the oil company's request to exclude the OCAW resolution from
its upcoming June 2 shareholder's meeting. On the same day, the SEC also
gave the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, composed of 256
religious groups who control assets of $50 billion, the go ahead to
introduce a second shareholders resolution attempting to restrain Unocal
from doing business with Myanmar.

"If the drug-laundering allegation is true, it is very unlikely that
this could have occurred without the knowledge of Unocal officials,"
said Robert Wages, president of the OCAW. "Uncovering the truth may mean
that Unocal bears direct responsibility for the rise in heroin use in
the US."

In an interview on April 19, Casanier expressed concern that if Unocal
and Total are allowed to move forward unchecked, "it will be a green
light for everybody to jump into the Burmese market and develop
activities which will be definitely connected with drug money laundering
on a big scale."

And, Casanier said, "not only in Burma, but everywhere where there is
dirty money involved, the Burma case will be considered an example."

Meanwhile, the great oil rush to Burma continues with Arco following
Unocal's lead. In partnership with MOGE since 1995, ARCO notified the
SLORC in late March about a new gas well just discovered off Burma's
coast. On February 12, Reuters reported that Texaco signed a deal with
Thailand to sell that country natural gas drilled in the same area as
the Unocal drilling fields.

Dennis Bernstein and Leslie Kean have reported on Burma's heroin trade
in the Boston Globe, The Nation, and for Pacific News Service, where
Bernstein is an associate editor.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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