Subject: Press Release: Land Grabs: Will Cameroon Bear the Brunt of Herakles' Implosion?
PRESS
RELEASE
Land Grabs:
Will Cameroon Bear the Brunt of Herakles' Implosion?
Oakland (CA): The embattled Herakles Farms
palm oil plantation project in Cameroon appears to have now gone off
the rails. Recent news of CEO Bruce Wrobel's early retirement from
parent company Sithe Global, plus charges of corruption filed in the
US by Cameroonian NGOs and the virtual disappearance of All for
Africa, an NGO (chaired by Bruce Wrobel) that granted a faux "green"
legitimacy, combine to indicate that failure is at hand for the
maligned project.
The word on the ground points to a dire financial situation and an
erosion of faith in Herakles Farms by investors and company's own
workers. Herakles Farms had purported to herald a new era of
"sustainable agriculture" by replacing old-growth rainforest with
palm oil plantations. But the company has faced a series of setbacks
since the Oakland Institute and Greenpeace International released a
report in May 2013 documenting false promises, risks, and legal flaws
in Herakles' planned operations.
Since the report's release, we have seen the following
developments:
- On June 18, 2013,
Reuters reported a Cameroonian senior official stating, "We have
asked them to forget their original deal signed with MINEPAT." The
Herakles Farms project is being renegotiated with the
plantation's surface area reduced from 73,000 to 20,000 hectares.
- On June 13, 2013, two Cameroonian NGOs filed a
complaint in the United States via OECD against Herakles Farms for
corruption.
- Senior staff have left the company, including
the Project Director and Senior Vice President for Agriculture.
- Herakles Farms is now harvesting logs from its
project area rather than developing a palm oil plantation.
- On September 12, 2013,
Greenpeace released evidence that Herakles Farms has been logging
illegally even after the suspension of their activities in May
2013.
- Ongoing dispute with former staff members and a
subcontractor over the non-payment of salaries and fees.
-
On July 30, 2013, Sithe Global announced that its CEO, Bruce
Wrobel, who is also the CEO of Herakles Farms, was retiring from the
company for unspecified reasons. Sithe Global, Herakles Farms, and All
for Africa share the same New York address.
- All for Africa, the NGO chaired by Bruce
Wrobel, appears to have vanished. Its website is not accessible
anymore and the contacts previously provided online no longer
function.
"Even if the size of the project is
reduced, the fragility of Herakles Farms is a high concern," said
Anuradha Mittal, Executive Director of the Oakland Institute. "It is
an unsustainable project, led by a company known for serious
wrongdoing, which will take over and destroy people's farmland and
Cameroon's vital natural resources. Given the project is well below
minimum sustainability standards, it begs for immediate intervening
review and action by the Cameroonian government," she continued.
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