Voices - Conversations on Business and Human Rights from Around the World

Egbert Wesselink on Corporate Crime and Sudan

Episode Summary

In this conversation, Egbert Wesselink speaks to IHRB's Salil Tripathi about the Swedish investigation into Lundin, over its activities in Sudan, the indictment, and its broader implications.

Episode Notes

Egbert Wesselink is a historian by training and serves as Senior Advisor with PAX, the Dutch peace movement. Before joining PAX he worked at the Dutch parliament, as a teacher in a French Lycée d’État, as Human Rights officer with UNTAC, and as a Russia/Caucasus expert with the UNHCR. He has been deeply involved with civil society in Russia and continues to be so  today.

At PAX, he leads the programme on Natural Resources, Conflict and Human Rights, focussing on the impacts of business enterprises on the rights and interests of communities in general and in Sudan, South Sudan, DRC and Colombia in particular. He has been actively involved in multi-stakeholder initiatives, including the Dutch Coal Dialogue and Bettercoal, and serves on the Steering Committee of the Voluntary Principles on Security and Human Rights. His report Unpaid Debt instigated a Swedish war crimes investigation into the oil company Lundin Energy AB that led to the indictment of two executive managers and is expected to go to court in 2022.

 

in Toronto on the sidelines of the Voluntary Principles Plenary Meeting in May,