• Live
    • Audio Only
  • google plus
  • facebook
  • twitter
News > Ecuador

Correa Calls Out Brad Pitt on Ecuador's Case Against Chevron

  • Brad Pitt (L) and Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa (R)

    Brad Pitt (L) and Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa (R) | Photo: Reuters

Published 4 May 2015
Opinion

The famous U.S. actor recently purchased the movie rights to a book that smears the campaign seeking justice for Chevron's contamination in the Amazon.

​Speaking on his weekly television program Saturday, Ecuador’s President Rafael Correa invited U.S. actor Brad Pitt to visit the country to personally witness the legacy of contamination and destruction left by the oil giant in the Ecuadorean rainforest .

News outlets reported in April that Pitt had purchased the movie rights to Paul Barrett's 2014 book “The Law of the Jungle.” The book presents Ecuador's case for justice in a highly unfavorable light. It focuses on a character assassination of U.S. lawyer Steven Donziger, who has relentlessly pursued justice in the case of Chevron's toxic legacy in the Amazon.

“We invite (Brad Pitt) to dip his hand (in the contaminated soil). We'll see if he continues with this movie project, which would be the biggest act of dishonesty,” said President Correa.

Correa also denounced Chevron's campaign to "discredit the Ecuadorean justice system.” The oil company has argued that an Ecuadorean court's ruling, confirmed by the country's Supreme Court, against Chevron was obtained through fraud, an argument also made by Barrett's book.

“Surely Brad Pitt does not know what he is getting involved with, in the complicity he is falling victim to,” said Correa.

RELATED: 10 Key Points on Ecuador’s Battle with Chevron

Pitt's involvement with this movie project raised some eyebrows as he and his wife, actor Angelina Jolie, are known for supporting humanitarian and environmental causes.

Correa mentioned having met Angelina Jolie and praised her humanitarian work. Jolie, who visited Ecuador on a number of occasions to meet with Colombian refugees as part of her work as a U.N. Goodwill Ambassador, commended the work of the Ecuadorean state in support of refugees.

Pitt and Jolie visited Ecuador together in April 2012 and visited the areas contaminated by the Chevron oil company. Pitt was even photographed inspecting the contamination near Lago Agrio.

Brad Pitt visited areas contaminated by the Chevron oil company in April 2012. | Photo: El Telegrafo

Oil Giant Texaco — which merged with Chevron in 2001 — was ordered to pay US$9.5 billion by the Ecuadorean Supreme Court for its role in what has been called one of the world’s greatest environmental disasters as a result of its oil exploration in the Ecuadorean Amazon between the years 1964 and 1990.

Comment
0
Comments
Post with no comments.