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Beijing. A
group of Chinese fishermen is suing ConocoPhillips for damages allegedly caused
by a huge oil spill at an offshore field operated by the US energy giant, their
lawyer said on Friday.
The
early-June spill leaked more than 3,000 barrels of oil and oil-based mud — a
substance used as a lubricant in drilling — off China’s eastern coast, drawing
widespread public criticism and warnings from Chinese authorities.
The group
has filed a civil lawsuit in a court in the eastern city of Qingdao asking the Houston-based
firm to pay 30 million yuan ($4.7 million) to more than 200 fishermen living
there, Yi Jiafeng told AFP.
“In
environmental pollution lawsuits, we follow the principle of ‘inverse
responsibility of providing proof’ — the victims detail the damage and the
respondent must provide counter evidence,” he said.
ConocoPhillips
was not immediately available for comment.
Environmental
groups and local fishermen have accused the US firm and its Chinese state-run
partner CNOOC of initially covering up the spill, which was discovered in June
but only made public nearly a month later.
But both
firms deny the allegations. ConocoPhillips says it cooperated with authorities
as soon as the accident occurred in Bohai Bay in northeast China.
“Any
release of oil, no matter the size, is too great,” it said in a statement on
its Web site.
CNOOC,
meanwhile, said last month all the leaks had now been identified and sealed,
the official Xinhua news agency reported.
The
fishermen involved in the lawsuit claim they lost a total of 164,000 yuan
invested in clam seedlings and 17,000 undersea cages — only 3,000 of which had
clams left alive after the spill, the official Beijing News reported.
The State
Oceanic Administration — the government agency that supervises and manages
China’s seas — has also said it will sue ConocoPhillips over the leak.
But an
earlier civil lawsuit connected to the spill was dismissed by a court in the
northern port of Tianjin for lack of evidence, the Beijing News said.
Yi, who
filed the lawsuit Friday, said it would take seven days for the Qingdao court
to decide whether or not it would accept the case.
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