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A man holds a shell coated in oil from a polluted river in the Niger delta. — Photo by Reuters/File

THE HAGUE: A Dutch court will decide on Wednesday whether Shell should clean up oil damage that destroyed a group of Nigerian farmers' land, a case that could set a precedent for global environmental responsibility.

Thousands of miles from their homes in the Niger delta, four Nigerian farmers and fishermen have dragged the Anglo-Dutch oil giant into court in a civil suit that could open the door for hundreds of similar cases.

The plaintiffs are backed by environmental lobby group Friends of the Earth.

Dutch judge Henk Wien will hand down a verdict at 10:00 am at a public hearing before The Hague district court in a case that was first filed in 2008.

It is the first time a Dutch company is being sued in the Netherlands over damage in another country, in this case oil pollution in 2005.

The farmers want Royal Dutch Shell to clean up the mess, repair and maintain defective pipelines to prevent further damage, and pay out compensation.

In a landmark ruling, the Dutch judiciary in 2009 declared itself competent to try the case despite protests from Shell that its Nigerian subsidiary was solely legally responsible for any damage.

Oil pollution has ravaged large swathes of the Niger Delta, situated in the southeast of the world's eighth-largest oil producer, which exports nearly two million barrels a day.

Shell, the biggest producer in the west African nation where it has been drilling for the last half-a-century, denied responsibility.

The company pinned oil spills between 2004 and 2007 on illegal theft and sabotage.

“Oil is being stolen daily and illegally refined in Nigeria,” a Shell official who asked not to be named told AFP.

“These illegal activities are the biggest contributor to pollution.”

“We say there was a spill, it wasn't our fault, we cleaned up nevertheless and that's what happened,” Shell's Vice President Environment Allard Castelein told AFP last year.

Friends of the Earth however said the scale of Nigeria's oil pollution was twice that of the five million barrels dumped in the Gulf of Mexico after the explosion on BP's Deepwater Horizon rig in 2010, in the biggest ever marine spill. Shell disputes the Nigerian figure and puts it much lower.

The UN's environmental agency in 2011 released a landmark report, saying decades of oil pollution in the Niger Delta's Ogoniland region may require the world's biggest ever clean-up and could take up to 30 years.

Environmental groups accuse Shell of double standards and treating spills in Nigeria differently from pollution in Europe or North America, a claim Shell strongly denies.

Legal experts said that should the farmers win, the case would set a precedent as it would be an important step towards holding multinationals answerable for damage done in developing countries.

Environmentalists want the Netherlands, and other Western nations, to pass laws forcing companies to enforce the same environmental responsibility standards abroad as at home.

“The claim is based on European law, which means that a victory here could give the green light for other actions in other countries, for instance against Total in France,” said Geert Ritsema, spokesman for Millieudefensie (Defence of the Environment), the Dutch branch of Friends of the Earth.

“We are ready to fight this case as long as need be,” he told AFP.

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