Berliner Boersenzeitung - Oil execs on trial in Sweden over Sudan war crimes role

EUR -
AED 4.088925
AFN 76.675908
ALL 98.79585
AMD 432.266957
ANG 2.015559
AOA 1049.789685
ARS 1078.460824
AUD 1.607852
AWG 2.003841
AZN 1.889342
BAM 1.954746
BBD 2.258162
BDT 133.647948
BGN 1.954569
BHD 0.419538
BIF 3243.663873
BMD 1.113245
BND 1.432989
BOB 7.755819
BRL 6.067323
BSD 1.118387
BTN 93.461774
BWP 14.562495
BYN 3.660094
BYR 21819.598675
BZD 2.254364
CAD 1.505797
CDF 3189.446285
CHF 0.942328
CLF 0.036489
CLP 1006.830068
CNY 7.817877
CNH 7.820935
COP 4669.394117
CRC 581.270962
CUC 1.113245
CUP 29.500988
CVE 110.205586
CZK 25.213999
DJF 199.16084
DKK 7.455779
DOP 67.34188
DZD 147.250726
EGP 53.828618
ERN 16.698672
ETB 131.692753
FJD 2.429657
FKP 0.847802
GBP 0.832891
GEL 3.044712
GGP 0.847802
GHS 17.670474
GIP 0.847802
GMD 77.927149
GNF 9657.533202
GTQ 8.653335
GYD 233.86392
HKD 8.654198
HNL 27.800263
HRK 7.568964
HTG 147.38657
HUF 397.303165
IDR 16923.547911
ILS 4.145139
IMP 0.847802
INR 93.303388
IQD 1465.110134
IRR 46867.607585
ISK 150.521485
JEP 0.847802
JMD 175.930412
JOD 0.788955
JPY 160.725821
KES 144.27222
KGS 93.739332
KHR 4541.429253
KMF 492.392385
KPW 1001.919716
KRW 1473.134643
KWD 0.339996
KYD 0.931981
KZT 538.100234
LAK 24695.242703
LBP 100152.706289
LKR 331.325424
LRD 216.403614
LSL 19.219866
LTL 3.287122
LVL 0.673391
LYD 5.304093
MAD 10.852349
MDL 19.498962
MGA 5067.040691
MKD 61.613607
MMK 3615.775784
MNT 3782.805884
MOP 8.947157
MRU 44.231962
MUR 51.231291
MVR 17.088121
MWK 1939.267407
MXN 21.903894
MYR 4.645531
MZN 71.108539
NAD 19.219693
NGN 1862.336129
NIO 41.156703
NOK 11.751852
NPR 149.536353
NZD 1.757719
OMR 0.428499
PAB 1.118397
PEN 4.154997
PGK 4.448442
PHP 62.578827
PKR 310.576783
PLN 4.28361
PYG 8716.222637
QAR 4.077802
RON 4.975645
RSD 117.036505
RUB 103.529459
RWF 1499.151382
SAR 4.176453
SBD 9.223871
SCR 15.147943
SDG 669.619067
SEK 11.313746
SGD 1.432529
SHP 0.847802
SLE 25.434642
SLL 23344.181746
SOS 639.138206
SRD 34.177176
STD 23041.920356
SVC 9.785549
SYP 2797.060963
SZL 19.218121
THB 36.157129
TJS 11.911185
TMT 3.907489
TND 3.39437
TOP 2.607334
TRY 38.070385
TTD 7.602765
TWD 35.500825
TZS 3028.025916
UAH 46.099177
UGX 4126.775184
USD 1.113245
UYU 46.644853
UZS 14221.460711
VEF 4032787.8817
VES 41.052386
VND 27357.991706
VUV 132.166663
WST 3.114261
XAF 655.585895
XAG 0.035472
XAU 0.000421
XCD 3.0086
XDR 0.825318
XOF 655.597667
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.64636
ZAR 19.233915
ZMK 10020.523299
ZMW 29.609771
ZWL 358.464381
  • CMSC

    -0.0528

    24.72

    -0.21%

  • CMSD

    -0.3000

    24.78

    -1.21%

  • SCS

    0.3400

    13.49

    +2.52%

  • NGG

    -0.0600

    69.67

    -0.09%

  • AZN

    0.2900

    77.91

    +0.37%

  • RIO

    -0.0600

    71.17

    -0.08%

  • GSK

    0.1700

    40.88

    +0.42%

  • BTI

    -0.2600

    36.58

    -0.71%

  • BP

    -0.0300

    31.39

    -0.1%

  • BCC

    -0.5100

    140.98

    -0.36%

  • RBGPF

    63.8600

    63.86

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    7.05

    +0.14%

  • JRI

    0.0900

    13.67

    +0.66%

  • BCE

    -0.3900

    34.8

    -1.12%

  • RELX

    -0.1000

    47.46

    -0.21%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    10.02

    -0.7%

Oil execs on trial in Sweden over Sudan war crimes role
Oil execs on trial in Sweden over Sudan war crimes role / Photo: Jonathan NACKSTRAND - AFP

Oil execs on trial in Sweden over Sudan war crimes role

A Swedish oil firm operated in Sudan with support from the military allegedly knew violence would affect civilians to bring the areas under control, prosecutors said Tuesday as two former executives faced war crimes charges.

Text size:

Swede Ian Lundin and Swiss national Alex Schneiter are accused of asking Sudan's government to make its military responsible for security at the site of one of Lundin Oil's exploration fields, which later led to aerial bombings, killing of civilians and burning of entire villages, according to the prosecution.

Mikael Ekman, Senior Legal Adviser at rights group Civil Rights Defenders, told AFP that the case was "extremely significant".

"This is about grave international crimes and what responsibility company leaders themselves have when doing business in countries in conflict," Ekman, who had come to watch the trial in person, told AFP.

"It's a tragedy that it hasn't happened before and that it doesn't happen more," Ekman continued, adding the outcome of the trial was of course still uncertain.

Lundin, 62, was chief executive of family firm Lundin Oil, now known as Orron Energy, from 1998-2002, and Schneiter, 61, was vice president at the time.

Heading into the courtroom, Lundin, dressed in a grey suit, told reporters he and Schneiter looked "forward to defending ourselves in a court of law".

"The accusations against us are false, they are completely false. They are also very vague," he continued.

The trial is set to be the biggest in Swedish history, following an over a decade-long probe, a more than 80,000-page investigation report and with closing arguments scheduled for February 2026.

The two, who were formally named as suspects in 2016, face the charge of "complicity in grave war crimes" committed during the rule of Omar al-Bashir.

In their opening arguments, the prosecution claimed that after Lundin Oil struck oil in 1999 in the "Block 5A" field in what is now South Sudan, the Sudanese military, together with an allied militia, led offensive military operations to take control of the area and create "the necessary preconditions for Lundin Oil's oil exploration".

Public prosecutor Henrik Attorps said: "The perpetrators used tactics and weapons that neither distinguished between civilians and fighters nor civilian property and military targets."

- 'Military force' -

According to the charge sheet, this included aerial bombardments from transport planes, shooting civilians from helicopter gunships, abducting and plundering civilians and burning villages and crops.

Prosecutors claim the accused were complicit because Lundin Oil had entered into agreements with Sudan's government to make the military responsible for security, knowing it meant the military and allied militias would need to take control of areas by "military force".

Prosecutor Karolina Wieslander told the court that Lundin and Schneiter had demanded that Sudan create "conditions" for oil operations in areas not controlled by the military or regime allied militias, knowing the military would need to perform "offensive" operations to do this.

If convicted, Lundin and Schneiter risk life sentences.

The prosecution has already requested that the two be banned from any business undertakings for 10 years.

It has also asked for the confiscation of 2.4 billion kronor ($218 million) from Orron Energy, equivalent to the profit the company made on the sale of its Sudan operations in 2003.

The defence meanwhile argued that the prosecution's case does not hold up.

"Our opinion is that these two years that will now be spent in the district court will be a huge waste of time and resources," Torgny Wetterberg, a lawyer for Ian Lundin, told AFP on the eve of the trial.

- 'Their own hands' -

Wetterberg told the court that the defence disagreed with the prosecution's descriptions of events, and that it had built its case on circumstantial claims with no concrete evidence.

Laying out his case to the court, Wetterberg also noted that the prosecutor did not even argue that the defendants had been part of any specific crime or even having knowledge of the time and place of instances of abuse.

He also said there many of the facts put forward by the prosecution, such as links between certain militias and the government were not backed up by substantial evidence.

Lundin himself noted that Sudan had long suffered from internal conflict.

"We never had anything to do with this conflict, to the contrary we were a force for good," Lundin told reporters Monday.

Mark Klamberg, a professor of international law at Stockholm University, told AFP that cases involving business leaders facing charges relating to war crimes are rare, and the case is a first for Sweden.

Charges are instead more commonly brought for crimes that the defendants were complicitly or indirectly involved, since those in leadership positions "rarely commit crimes with their own hands".

"But it places demands on the prosecutor and evidence, making cases complicated and drawn out," Klamberg told AFP.

Sweden can prosecute crimes committed abroad in its court system, though the government had to give its approval to indict a foreign national for crimes committed abroad.

(A.Berg--BBZ)