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Story

2 Mag 2023

Human rights defenders protecting our planet from irresponsible business activity under sustained attack

Emily Arasim/WECAN International

Between January 2015 – March 2023, the Business & Human Rights Resource Centre tracked more than 4,700 attacks against human rights defenders raising concerns about harmful business practice. In 2022 alone, we tracked 555 attacks, revealing that on average more than 10 defenders were attacked every single week for raising legitimate concerns about irresponsible business activity. Three-quarters of attacks (75%) were against climate, land and environmental defenders. Over a fifth of attacks (23%) were against Indigenous defenders, who are protecting over 80% of the world’s remaining biodiversity, although they comprise approximately 6% of the global population.

This is just the tip of the iceberg. Our research is based on publicly available information and as many attacks, especially non-lethal attacks (including death threats, judicial harassment and physical violence), never make it to media sources and there is a significant gap in government monitoring of attacks, the problem is even more severe than these figures indicate.

Additional key findings from our analysis of attacks in 2022 include:

  • Latin America and Asia & Pacific continue to be the most dangerous regions for defenders.
  • Brazil, India and Mexico had the highest numbers of attacks against defenders. Brazil, the most dangerous country overall for defenders, is set to host the G20 presidency in 2024.
  • Nearly one-quarter of attacks were against women human rights defenders.
  • Mining is the most dangerous sector for defenders, with nearly 30% of attacks. This has been consistent since we began tracking in 2015 – showing little progress has been made to prevent attacks in this sector.
  • In cases where information was available publicly about perpetrators, police were the leading perpetrators of attacks, followed by the malicious use of judicial systems to criminalise and stop the work of defenders. Other perpetrators included local and State authorities, armed forces, illegal loggers or miners, employers and private security guards.
  • In cases where attacks could be connected with a specific company or a business project (43% of total attacks), the highest number of attacks related to companies headquartered in India and the United Arab Emirates. Both countries have tried to position themselves as global and environmental leaders and are hosting major multilateral events in 2023 – G20 and COP28, respectively.

The five companies whose operations, value chains, or business relationships were connected to the highest numbers of attacks in 2022 were JSW Steel Ltd. (India), Otterlo Business Corporation (UAE), TotalEnergies (France, East African Crude Oil Pipeline majority shareholder), Inversiones los Pinares (Honduras), and NagaCorp Ltd and its subsidiary NagaWorld (Cambodia) (more information about the allegations can be downloaded here). These include any attacks against defenders raising human rights concerns about these companies’ operations, value chains, or business relationships, even if the company did not perpetrate the attack directly.

We invited these companies to respond. JSW Steel Ltd. and TotalEnergies responded; their full responses are available below. Otterlo Business Corporation, Inversiones los Pinares, and NagaCorp did not respond.

Company Responses

TotalEnergies (formerly Total) View Response
JSW Steel View Response
Inversiones Los Pinares S.A. (part of Grupo EMCO Holding)

No Response

NagaWorld

No Response

Otterlo Business Corporation

No Response

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