Pubdate: Thu, 07 Feb 2002 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2002 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Alexei Barrionuevo, Thaddeus Herrick, Staff Reporters of The Wall Street Journal Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/find?203 (Terrorism) http://www.mapinc.org/colombia.htm THREAT OF TERROR ABROAD ISN'T NEW FOR OIL COMPANIES LIKE OCCIDENTAL ARAUCA, Colombia -- Pools of oil gather along the Occidental pipeline that runs through this vast savanna, the result of spills from repeated bombings by rebel forces. On a recent helicopter tour, Occidental Petroleum Corp. officials got word of yet another attack. Their chopper cut through a cloud of thick smoke to take a look at the crimson flames. "It's frustrating," said Occidental's international chief of security, using a global positioning device to pinpoint the exact location of the oil break. "But we're pretty used to this by now." Amid a 38-year-old civil war, Occidental faces a near-constant threat of terrorism. Rebel groups have extorted local workers. Engineers have been murdered. But the main focus of the guerrillas' wrath is the 470-mile oil pipeline that transports oil from the Cano Limon oil field to a port on the Caribbean. Rebels bombed the pipeline a record 170 times last year, up from 99 attacks in 2000. Two guerrilla groups, the National Liberation Army, or ELN, and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, are battling for economic and military control of the oil region here. The heightened attacks have coincided with the recent arrival of the better-funded FARC, which draws much of its income from cocaine trafficking and is trying to put a stranglehold on the ELN, according to military officials and oil-company executives. The U.S. has labeled both the ELN and FARC as terrorist organizations. And for the first time, the U.S. government has proposed dedicating funds to pipeline protection in Colombia: As a part of its 2003 budget proposal, the Bush administration on Monday proposed spending $98 million to help train local troops in pipeline protection. The oil industry has since its earliest days operated in terror zones. In West Africa, Chevron Corp. has for years produced oil amid a bloody civil war. Last year, Exxon Mobil Corp. for several months shuttered its onshore natural-gas operations in Aceh, Indonesia, where separatists have waged a long guerrilla war against the government. Since Sept. 11, the risk of operating in the Arab world has intensified. More companies are discovering what the oil industry has long known: that pushing forward in the face of terrorism is possible, expensive and complicated in ways that aren't always obvious. While many oil companies operating abroad have faced the threat of terrorism, few have experienced a campaign of violence so directly aimed at their core mission of exploration and production as has Occidental, until recently among the biggest foreign oil producers in Latin America. The rise in rebel attacks has cut Cano Limon's production to 19 million barrels, a 58% reduction from the site's 1999 levels. "2001 was a terrible year," says Guimer Dominguez, Occidental's president of Colombia operations. Probably the most contentious issue for Los Angeles-based Occidental is the company's reliance on the Colombian military for security. The U.S. State Department cites the Colombian military for serious human-rights violations, including extra-judicial killings. Impunity remains a problem, with authorities seldom bringing high-ranking police and security officers to justice. The State Department says members of the security forces collaborate with paramilitary groups, sharing information and even providing ammunition. Occidental has even come under fire for contracting a high-tech surveillance plane that may have played a role in a 1998 attack by the Colombian military in which at least 17 civilians died. Occidental denies any involvement. Colombian authorities are investigating the incident. Occidental says that given the scope of the violence, it must work with the military. The company says it has helped organize seminars for the Colombian military on humanitarian law and human rights in cooperation with the International Red Cross, but it must respect Colombia's autonomy. "It's not our role to take the place of the government," says Larry Meriage, a company spokesman. Beyond human-rights concerns, Occidental must cope with the practicalities of operations in a war zone. A few years ago, after rebels stole employee cars and murdered two engineers in separate incidents on the same day just 100 yards from the compound, Occidental restricted most employees' travel outside the Cano Limon compound to helicopters. Occidental screens prospective contractors to ferret out spies. Recently, when it moved equipment to drill a new well, it did so with an army convoy, complete with air support. "It's a hell of an operating environment out there," says Mr. Meriage. "Most [companies] have cut and run." One reason is that operating in Colombia has become more expensive. Occidental officials say they pay about 50 cents in security costs for each barrel of oil extracted. And the costs are climbing as attacks on its pipeline rise. But Mr. Meriage says staying put is still worth it, in large part because the oil is a relatively cheap $10 a barrel to extract, including taxes. When it was discovered in 1983 -- then with an estimated one billion barrels of reserves -- Cano Limon was seen as a field that would transform Occidental. But as oil royalties began gushing into Arauca, the ELN frequently bombed the pipeline and shook down local repair crews. Occidental acknowledged gifts of money, food and transportation to the guerrillas. "We take care of the local population," said Occidental's late founder Armand Hammer in 1985. "It has worked out so far." More Foe Than Friend? The rebels, claiming Occidental was stealing Colombia's natural resources, saw the company as more foe than friend, however. Late one night in 1988, the ELN exploded a car bomb outside Occidental's nine-story Colombian headquarters in Bogota, badly damaging the building. Today Occidental says its employees and contractors are still shaken down by FARC and ELN guerrillas, though the company says it has a zero-tolerance policy for bribes, firing workers who pay off the guerrillas. Despite the company's professed efforts, "it's impossible" to know who is on the take, says Col. Gustavo Matamoros, second in command of the army's forces in Arauca. Meanwhile, the company houses executives in Bogota in high-rise apartments and has them chauffeured in bulletproof cars by drivers who vary their routes. An Occidental lawyer who recently visited Bogota for the first time says two bodyguards followed him everywhere he went in public. For visitors arriving by chopper, the Occidental compound unfolds like a small resort, with tennis courts and a swimming pool in view. Long motel-style buildings with Spanish-tile roofs house workers. Army personnel search bags. Security staff issue electronic key cards, complete with employee photos and blood types. But the feeling of safety is fleeting. The company has made it clear to employees that it can't pay ransoms in the event of a kidnapping. Workers must show ID cards at a half-dozen security checkpoints. Palm-reading devices restrict access to executive offices. Security cameras are everywhere. At Cano Limon, Occidental goes to great lengths, and costs, to isolate its workers. The compound is a little more than an hour's drive from the airport in Arauca, but when skirmishes between the rebels and the military increased several years ago, Occidental discouraged driving. The company also abandoned use of a nearby river to ferry workers to Cano Limon. Instead, most workers fly in by helicopter for two-week work stints. Those who travel overland can suffer the consequences. Last April, rebels seized a bus filled with 100 oil workers and security contractors on their way to work. Most were released that night, though about 30 were held for as many as four days and pumped for security information. No one was injured. Occidental's security chief brought in special dogs after a bomb in a dump truck exploded in October 2000 just outside the main entrance. The early-morning attack narrowly missed a bus filled with 40 secretaries and other local Arauca workers. The truck's bumper landed 50 feet in front of the bus and some workers said they felt the blast from their dormitories. After the incident, Occidental built a new access road about 300 feet farther out to keep potential explosions away from employees. Occidental even imports mechanics from nearby towns to Cano Limon rather than risk losing company cars to rebel thieves in Arauca. "These are the hidden costs," says Mr. Dominguez, Occidental's Colombian president. Limiting Risk Occidental tries to limit its risk of kidnappings by hiring Colombian workers. It employs fewer than 10 foreign nationals in Colombia, none at the compound. Most Colombian workers come from distant cities, making them unlikely to be a source of information for the guerrillas about military troop locations or security measures. Local contractors are seen as such a source, and Occidental uses psychologists to screen them. The local oil workers' union sees the practice as an invasion of privacy. But company officials and Colombian military officials say that locals face too much pressure to meet guerrillas' demands. Mr. Dominguez says Occidental has often suspended or canceled contracts after discovering contractors were paying off rebels with vacunas, or vaccinations, slang for protection money. "Everyone has the ELN pistol to the side of his head," says Col. Matamoros. The potential for violence and the specter of work stoppages have taken a palpable toll on Cano Limon's workers. (So fearful are the employees that Occidental asked that their names not be used.) A contractor who works in the cafeteria said his dreams often incorporate the shots in the night that he hears near the camp's living quarters. The military routinely conducts training exercises at night at Cano Limon, and there have been occasional firefights just outside the compound's gates. A worker in the legal department drives his unmarked sport-utility vehicle outside the camp almost every day to deliver documents to farmers and ranchers. Several years ago he was kidnapped by rebels and held at gunpoint until the military staged a dramatic rescue. For months, he says, he had nightmares in which he was unable to run from his captors. But he explains that he has no intention of quitting because his paycheck helps support his son, who is in graduate school in the U.S. Occidental, he says, pays him twice what he'd earn working for Ecopetrol, the state oil company. Sitting in his office, Cano Limon's human-resources director contemplates the latest figures: more than a third of Occidental workers with suspended contracts because production had ground to a halt. With crews racing to fix three holes in the pipeline, "There are going to be a lot more suspensions," he says. "Morale is bruised right now." Other fears persist. When activity at the camp is paralyzed, "we are in more danger than ever," says the director, "because the tanks are full of crude oil. So we have to have the emergency system activated at all times and keep a minimum number of people to attend to any eventual emergency." Not everyone admits to feeling strain. An American executive who lives in Bogota but visits Cano Limon several days a month says when he is at the compound he drives around the production facilities and isn't fazed by sporadic gunfire. "As someone who grew up on a lot of military bases, and kind of lived that lifestyle, I am used to military people being around," he says. "For us to operate, this is just part of the business that we have to deal with." While in Bogota, the executive has a driver and at least one bodyguard. His two boys ride a bus to school and the family takes weekend trips outside of town -- once the routes are cleared by Occidental security officials and the military. He sometimes walks to work or lunch, "as long as we vary the times we come and go." But in his 20 years on the oil industry he says he has never been in a place where production is shut down so often. "It weighs on you," he says. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake