Hundreds of placard-carrying protesters gathered outside the European Union offices in Uganda’s capital, Kampala, to express dissatisfaction over its call to the country to end a strategic oil pipeline project with neighbouring Tanzania.
The East African Crude Oil Pipeline project will stretch 1,443km (896 miles) from Lake Albert in western Uganda to the Tanzanian port of Tanga on the Indian Ocean.
Last week, the EU parliament passed a resolution warning of human rights abuses and the social and environmental risk posed by the project.
“EU Parliament Stop Ill-Intention on Our Oil”, “Uganda is an Independent Country With its Minerals. This is Our Oil”, “Our Oil is Our Hope,” read some placards at European union offices at Crested Tower.
Civil Society groups say some 100,000 people risk being displayed and have urged the contractors, France’s Total Energies and the China National Offshore Oil Corporation, to pause the $10Billion project until they find an alternative route.
The authorities in Tanzania and Uganda have criticised the EU’s opposition to the EACOP project.
Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni said nothing would stop the project. “I saw in the papers that the EU parliament passed a resolution directing Total not to proceed with the East African Crude Oil Pipeline. Please, don’t waste your time thinking about that. We have a contract with Total written very well. The oil will come out in 2025, the first batch. The oil project will go on and no one can stop it,” the president said on Friday last week.