Phnom Penh Post (Cambodia): Former Shell employees asking for interest on retirement pay: Friday 26 August 2005
By Vong Sokheng
Former employees of Shell oil company are demanding $1 million in interest on 
retirement benefits recently awarded to Cambodia staff members who worked for 
the company before 1975. 
The staff of Societe Shell du Cambodge (SSC) were forced to stop working when 
the country was overtaken by the Khmer Rouge in 1975. 
In November 2001 SSC's modern-day equivalent, Shell International Limited, paid 
retirement benefits totaling $250,000 to 38 former employees, said Bun Khem, one 
of the claimants. 
A further $109,710 was paid in March last year to cover long-overdue retirement 
benefits owed to 35 other former staff. 
Now the 73 former employees are demanding that Shell's London-based operations 
pay 10 percent interest on their retirement benefits, Khem said.
"According to the legal basis, the company has to pay 10 percent as an interest 
rate of the retirement benefits, which the company was not able to pay after 
1975," Khem said. "I think that the SSC has tried to cheat our money."
He estimated the interest owed between 1975 and 2003 was about $1 million. 
The action comes in response to a similar claim in Vietnam in which Royal 
Dutch-Shell Group of Companies paid $2 million to nearly 600 Vietnamese workers 
who lost their jobs without severance pay when the oil company's Vietnam 
operations were taken by the communist government.
"Our case is similar to the one already applied in Vietnam, and the same legal 
basis of operating should clearly consist of interest [paid on retirement 
funds]," Khem said. 
The Cambodian claimants tried to push their request through the British 
Ambassador in September last year, but were unsuccessful, Khem said. 
Robert Pritt, senior legal counsel of the Shell company in London, did not reply 
to e-mails.
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/TXT/current/stories/former.htm
Click here to return to ShellNews.net HOME PAGE