On 3 May 2011, as Palestinian Council of Human Rights Organisations, we sent Stadsregio Arnhem Nijmegen a letter urging them to exclude VeoliaTransdev, parent company of the Dutch transport market leader Connexxion, from the upcoming one billion Euros public transport tender for Arnhem Nijmegen and from all future contracts on grounds of grave misconduct in the OPT. The tender in question will include all the Arnhem Nijmegen city district’s public bus services as well as the Arnhem-Doetinchem railway line, one of the most frequently traveled regional tracks.
In a press release issued two weeks after our joint advocacy initiative, Dutch local authorities publicly announced that Hermes and Keolis are taking part in the public transport tender while VeoliaTransdev will not participate in the bid. However, Hermes is a subsidiary of Connexxion, which means that Connexxion exercises full control over one of the two companies tendering. Connexxion, itself subject to the control of VeoliaTransdev, effectively brings Hermes under the overall control of the Veolia Group. By virtue of this structural relationship, VeoliaTransdev will benefit from profits generated through the exploitation of the public transport concession for the Arnhem Nijmegen city district, should Hermes be awarded the contract.
The undersigned organisations find it highly problematic that VeoliaTransdev, a company with a disputed reputation and involvement in illegal activities in the OPT, circumvents civil society concerns by tendering through Hermes, and therefore calls on the Stadsregio Arnhem Nijmegen to exclude Veolia’s vehicle Hermes from the public transport tender.
We are further gravely concerned about the relationship between the Dutch Government and transporter Connexxion. The Dutch Government owns one-third of the shares in formerly state-owned Connexxion as a result of a controversial transaction between the Dutch Government and Transdev and the Bank Nederlandse Gemeenten (a specialised financial institution for the public sector) in which, in mid-2007, the State sold two-third of its shares to French transporter Transdev.
It is highly undesirable for the Dutch Government to have a shareholders relationship with VeoliaTransdev, as its obligations under international law cannot be reconciled with the violations of international humanitarian law to which the Veolia Group is associated to. Therefore, as Palestinian human rights organisations, we call upon the Dutch Government to promptly reconsider its participation in businesses of the Veolia Group.
Sahar Francis, General Director, Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association |
Shawqi Issa, General Director, Ensan Center for Human Rights and Democracy |
Khalil Abu Shammala |
Issam Aruri General Director Jerusalem Center for Legal Aid and Human Rights |
Shawan Jabarin |
Iyad Barghouti, General Director, Ramallah Center for Human Rights Studies |
Issam Younis, General Director, Al Mezan Center for Human Rights | Maha Abu Dayieh, General Director, Women’s Centre for Legal Aid and Counseling |
Rifat Kassis, General Director Defence for Children International - Palestine Section |