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By Stanley Reed

© The New York Times Co.

LONDON » Britain’s Supreme Court said Friday that a group of about 50,000 Nigerian farmers and fishermen could bring a case in London’s High Court against Royal Dutch Shell over years of oil spills in the Niger Delta that have polluted their land, wells and waterways.

The judges said there was the potential that a parent company like Shell, which has its headquarters in the Netherlands but a large British presence, has responsibility for the activities of subsidiaries like the Shell Petroleum Development Co. of Nigeria, which operates in the Delta region.

The court overruled a lower court that had said that there was no case to be brought against Shell in Britain. On Friday, the judges said there was “a real issue to be tried.”

The ruling is “a watershed moment in the accountability of multinational companies,” said Daniel Leader, a partner in the British law firm of Leigh Day, who led the legal team representing the Nigerian communities. Leader added that the judgment would likely increase the ability of “impoverished communities” to hold powerful companies to account.

Last month a court in the Netherlands ruled that Shell was liable for pollution in another case involving Nigerian farmers.

The Ogale and Bille peoples bringing the case in Britain say their lives have been blighted by years of damage from oil spills from pipelines operated by Shell. Leader said that they were bringing their claims in Britain because the prospects of success in the Nigerian courts were remote, given that few lawyers would take on a case and local potentates might lay claim to money from any judgment.

According to Shell, Nigerian law requires it to pay compensation for spills caused by operational issues but not for damage resulting from sabotage.

“The spills at issue happened in communities that are heavily impacted by oil theft, illegal oil refining, and the sabotage of pipelines,” a company spokeswoman said in an email Friday.

Leader said that a case was now likely to be brought against Shell in Britain.

Unless Shell settles, the case is likely to take another two or three years, he said. He declined to give an estimate of the damages that the Nigerian plaintiffs might seek, saying the main issue was to force Shell to clean up the spills, something he said Shell has failed to do.

Shell said the company’s subsidiary in Nigeria cleans up the mess “regardless of the cause.”

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