Houston, We Still Have A Problem An Alternative Annual Report on Halliburton, May 16th, 2005 | |||
Download 2005 Alternative Annual Report
On May 18, Halliburton will hold its annual shareholders meeting in downtown Houston. Inside, CEO David Lesar will be congratulating himself on the astonishing $7.1 billion revenue the company has made off its recent work in Iraq. This number is double what the company made in the war-torn country the previous year; it boosts Halliburton's overall revenue some 25 percent, bringing it to over $20 billion for 2004.
view a full list of current investigations In our new report, called "Houston: We Still Have a Problem" (download as a pdf below), we document Halliburton's 2004 track record. The report details everything from the company's unwillingness to prevent bribery, fraud, and corruption within its workforce to its inability to take proper precautions to protect its employees in Iraq. We also expose the company's attempts to undermine US government regulations that protect drinking water, and side-step federal laws meant to prohibit Halliburton from doing business with corrupt and brutal regimes around the world. We are not the first to shed light on these issues. But Halliburton's agenda is so melded with that of the Bush administration that questions raised by auditors, inspectors-general, and other independent actors - not to mention corporate accountability watchdog groups - languish silently in Congress and the White House. In the first part of 2004, the US Congress preferred to exhaustively probe the United Nations "Oil-For-Food" program than delve into Halliburton's war profiteering as unearthed by Congressman Henry Waxman and Pentagon auditors. Just last week, the US Army awarded Halliburton's subsidiary company, KBR, with a $72.2 million bonus. This is the same US Army that is part of the Department of Defense, whose auditors have unearthed the $212.3 million in overcharges by the company! While not everyone in Houston will choose to protest these issues outside the Halliburton shareholders meeting, we should all be concerned about whether or not Halliburton is worthy of handling billions in US taxpayer dollars. We believe that rather than rewarding Halliburton for its unethical and possibly illegal behavior, US policy makers should hold the company accountable for known overcharging and fraud and investigate the other problems we've mentioned. If they did, Halliburton would quite possibly lose its US government contracts for good. Pratap Chatterjee is the director and managing editor of CorpWatch. Andrea Buffa works for the human rights group Global Exchange. |