ShellNews.net: Forbidden Words of 
						a Shell Whistleblower Dr John Huong – A Shell Geologist 
						for almost 30 years: Friday 9 Sept 2005 10:00am EDT
						 
						
							
							
							Publisher's Introduction: This 
							was a letter from Dr. John Huong which he supplied 
							to me just before Eight companies from the Royal 
							Dutch Shell Group obtained a 
							
							High Court Injunction and Restraining Order 
							that robbed him of his 
							
							HUMAN RIGHTS 
							and Freedom of Expression accorded under the 
							Universal Declaration on Human Rights. These eight 
							Shell companies belong to member countries of the 
							United Nations. 
							
							 
							
							
							I have taken the decision to publish 
							his letter at this time because I am appalled at the 
							double standards being applied. Dr Huong incurred 
							the wrath of Shell management for 
							
							
							SPEAKING THE TRUTH ABOUT SHELL’S RESERVES POSITION, 
							AND IN REGARD TO
							SAFETY, 
							HEALTH, SECURITY, ENVIRONMENTAL, PROFESSIONAL 
							CONCERNS
							
							
							and ended up with no job, no compensation and 
							with a defamation action hanging over the heads of 
							himself and his family. 
							
							Being a man of the highest integrity Dr Huong 
							insisted on working within Shell’s Statement of 
							General Business Principles 
							
							(SGBP) 
							requiring honesty, integrity and openness in all of 
							Shell’s dealings. Contrast his reward for being a 
							man of principle against the treatment given to 
							Shell directors such as Sir Phillip Watts 
							
							WHO LIED AND COVERED UP THE TRUTH ABOUT SHELL’S 
							RESERVES, AND AS A RESULT, DESTROYED SHELL’S 
							REPUTATION.
							
							
							 
							
							
							Watts has been rewarded with an USD 
							18 MILLION dollar pension pot including a massive 
							settlement sum. Shell has so far paid over a quarter 
							of a BILLION US dollars in fines and settlements for 
							management misdeeds. Shell has just paid umpteen 
							more millions to settle a  US class action law 
							suit being brought against Watts and his 
							dishonest/incompetent fellow directors, some of whom 
							amazingly remain at the helm of Shell. 
							
							
							So on the one hand a loyal, honest, 
							hard-working employee is crucified for telling the 
							truth while on the other, corporate crooks are 
							showered with money and insulated from any penalty 
							or court room justice by shareholder funds, used 
							like confetti, on their behalf. This is one of the 
							most disgusting examples of the corrupt corporate 
							world that I have encountered. 
							 
							
							
							- Alfred Donovan
							
							 
 
						
						 
						
						
						THE LETTER FROM DR HUONG
						
						 
						
						
						My name is Dr John Huong. Until May 2003 
						I was a Shell geologist for almost 30 years - a 
						management level employee of Shell Malaysia. I 
						specialised in many areas of earth sciences including 
						Micropalaeontology, Petrology, Sedimentology, Field 
						Geology, Bio-Sequence Stratigraphy, Operation Geology, 
						Exploration Geology, Reservoir Geology and Production 
						Geology.  I am also conversant with Petrophysics, 
						Petroleum Engineering (i.e. Well Engineering, Reservoir 
						Engineering) and Petroleum Economics.  In the company, I 
						belonged to the Malaysian Senior Staff Council (MSSC) 
						and was once its Vice President.
						
						 
						
						
						My work involved being a 
						contributor/producer for Shell Field Development Plans 
						and scouting for Shell block biddings. I was for example 
						in the early 1990's involved in a Shell study of oil and 
						gas basins at the Ural-Volga, Caspian and Siberia in the 
						former Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) at the 
						invitation of the Russian Oil & Gas Ministry and the 
						Eisenhower Foundation of USA. I have studied Business 
						Administration, specialising in Human Resource 
						Management. I am also a graduate from the Chartered 
						Institute of Marketing, UK. After work, I do community 
						work for the needy.
						
						 
						
						
						I started out my career with Shell being 
						immensely proud of the company I worked for and 
						represented. I was very impressed by the famous 
						advertising slogans: "You can be sure of Shell"; "We 
						Care, We Share" and more recently, "Triple Bottom Line" 
						and "Profits AND Principles". My pride in being a Shell 
						geologist was reinforced by Shell management’s stated 
						commitment to core principles of integrity, 
						transparency, honesty and professionalism, as expressed 
						in Shell’s Statement of General Business Principles 
						(SGBP). I felt 
						that I was part of an outstanding multinational company 
						of the very highest reputation which is in consonant 
						with my own personal belief and value system.
						
						
						 
						
						
						My respect for Shell regretfully 
						evaporated away over more recent years because of events 
						that I have witnessed. I eventually came to the sad 
						realisation that the companies’ actions were totally at 
						variance with its carefully contrived public image. It 
						is in fact a ruthless unprincipled multinational, as 
						demonstrated by countless examples, most vividly by its 
						record of oppressive exploitative policies in Nigeria. 
						Shell, in collaboration with the military government, 
						allegedly put men of good repute to torture, hanging; 
						where women, children were raped and their homes razed 
						to the ground.  Shell must answer all these questions 
						clearly to resolve that part of a horrible history.
						 
						
						
						If only Shell senior management had 
						abided by and enforced the values and strictures 
						enshrined in the SGBP I would still be a loyal dedicated 
						Shell geologist today. Furthermore Shell’s reputation 
						would not have been destroyed by the disgraceful conduct 
						of its most senior management, some of whom at the time 
						of writing this letter are still at the pinnacle of the 
						Royal Dutch Shell Group.
						How can lies, 
						dishonesty and cover-up be reconciled with the above 
						core principles of the SGBP? Has there ever been a 
						better example of blatant hypocrisy? 
						
						
						 
						
						
						It is proper before going any further to 
						declare my personal grievances against Shell senior 
						management. I was dismissed after almost 30 years of 
						loyal dedicated service. The allegations against me were
						
						
						"absent from work without leave, permission or 
						reasonable excuse" 
						
						and 
						
						"failure to attend weekly meetings without permission, 
						leave or reasonable excuses". 
						
						The charges against me were made out of 
						malice and were unfounded, unproven and invented without 
						any formal investigation. The whole process was 
						undermined by improper actions in breach of natural 
						justice. 
						
						 
						
						
						As Shell senior executives are aware, 
						normal disciplinary procedures were not followed by a 
						management accredited with an ISO certification for 
						excellence in Human Resource (HR) Management. I received 
						no reprimands, nor written or oral warnings. Even worse, 
						threats were made by HR personnel against my assistant, 
						whom I had appointed as permitted by the Domestic 
						Inquiry (DI) Process which preceded my unwarranted 
						dismissal. The truth is that Shell senior management was 
						bent on getting rid of me because I had expressed 
						reservations about Shell misdeeds and wrongdoings. I 
						have a conscience and felt compelled to speak out for 
						the benefits of a civilized society. I have no doubt 
						that a fairly conducted independent investigation would 
						clear my name once and for all. 
						
						 
						
						
						Obviously the issue of my dismissal is 
						not of world shaking significance but it is of great 
						importance to me because it reflects on my personal 
						integrity
						
						
						
						which I value very highly.  I have been shamed and 
						humiliated. If I had been genuinely guilty of the 
						allegations that would be bad enough; it makes my 
						situation almost unbearable knowing that my dismissal 
						was based on unfounded allegations combined with 
						falsified evidence and the deliberate intimidation of my 
						assistant for the domestic inquiry. 
						
						
						 
						
						
						I did write recently to Malcolm Brinded 
						who is a Group MD of the Royal Dutch Shell Group and 
						Chief Executive Officer of Shell Exploration and 
						Production seeking his intervention. Suffice it to say 
						that although I had worked for Shell for almost 30 years 
						in a senior position, Mr Brinded did not even have the 
						courtesy to acknowledge my communication. That alone 
						speaks volumes about him. 
						
						 
						
						
						I therefore feel a deep sense of betrayal 
						and injustice caused by the treatment I have received 
						from Shell management. I am a victim of what others have 
						accurately described as a corporate culture of cover-up 
						at Shell. If I had not brought sensitive matters to the 
						attention of Shell senior management, I would almost 
						certainly still be a Shell geologist. 
						
						 
						
						For example, in 
						1997, I was assigned to the multi-billion dollar 
						Kinabalu offshore platform project as the only 
						Production Geologist. A faulty design rendered the 
						Production Platform unsafe and potentially subject to 
						sinking. I was threatened by the Kinabalu Project 
						Manager 
						because I raised these important work issues during a 
						Project Team Meeting which was minuted. Shell did not 
						want such sensitive information placed on the record. 
						Information about this vitally important life 
						threatening issue was not passed on to PETRONAS at the 
						time. PETRONAS is Malaysia's national petroleum 
						corporation. Wholly-owned by the Malaysian Government, 
						the corporation is vested with the stewardship for the 
						entire oil and gas resources in Malaysia and is 
						entrusted with the responsibility for safety and other 
						matters relating to Kinabalu Field development and other 
						such projects. 
						
						
						Shell deliberately withheld the information from 
						PETRONAS.  In time to come I will present other misdeeds 
						of Shell for withholding information from PETRONAS or 
						the Malaysian Government and its people who live in a 
						lovely country where my family and I are also proud to 
						reside.
						
						
						 
						
						
						Because my stand on this matter in 
						consonant with Shell Group Business Principles, its 
						governance and with Malaysian national interests in 
						mind, I made my concerns known internally at Shell. 
						Shell made me feel that I had sinned for having a moral 
						compass and a conscience. I was transferred out of the 
						Kinabalu Project without any proper reasons being given 
						and made redundant in exile to work on a paper platform 
						that was left in mothballed state for many years, known 
						as the Ketam Field - "Ketam" in local language mean 
						"Crab"!
						
						 
						
						
						I raised my grievances at being 
						transferred out of the project against my will to the 
						Ketam Field and the matter reached Managing 
						Director/Chairman level. An Internal Investigation was 
						subsequently conducted and blame apportioned to many 
						individuals, including the General Manager. However I 
						was not restored to my geology job. Shell management was 
						apparently intent at all costs on covering up the flaws 
						I had exposed in the Kinabalu Project and wanted to keep 
						me out of the picture and further involvement.
						On reflection I 
						believe that the most important concerns to Shell 
						management was stopping important information from being 
						disclosed to its Malaysian partner, PETRONAS 
						(information PETRONAS was entitled to receive) and 
						hiding the truth about hydrocarbon reserves from Shell 
						shareholders. 
						
						 
						
						
						What happened naturally caused me a great 
						deal of personal stress but I was concerned that a 
						catastrophe might take place and I did not want to have 
						any deaths on my conscience, nor put my country Malaysia 
						at risk due any potential oil/gas spills since the 
						coastline of Brunei was very near to the Kinabalu field. 
						No job is worth that risk. 
						
						 
						
						
						From 1997 until 2003, I was not only 
						stressed out but also unfairly treated by my supervisors 
						by 
						
						moving me around the company. 
						I believe this happened as a direct result of my raising 
						the safety, 
						
						reserves and other technical concerns and issues about
						
						
						the Kinabalu project. It seems totally 
						wrong to me now as I had not blown the whistle on Shell 
						with PETRONAS but only made my concerns known internally 
						at Shell. 
						
						 
						
						
						In mid 2002, I was working under Mr. Hee 
						Len Hi, the General Manager for Shell Malaysia 
						Technology Management/Technical Services. My assignment 
						at that time was to track a Facility Verification Report 
						pertaining to helicopter services. I was informed by 
						Operation Installation Managers of certain 
						unprofessional work which had taken place in relation to 
						the serviceability and safety of the helicopter fleet. 
						However I discovered to my horror that passengers were 
						still told to board one such helicopter and thus ended 
						up, without their knowledge, as being TEST CREWS 
						together with the pilots.
						
						
						I brought this alarming situation to the attention of Mr 
						Hee Len Hi. It was not something he wished to know 
						because the logistic unit was also under his 
						responsibilities. His made his displeasure at my 
						internal whistleblower action obvious. Once again my 
						conscience and wish to work within Shell’s stated 
						ethical code had got me into serious trouble. 
						
						
						 
						
						
						I have since wondered whether serious 
						accidents which have occurred in Shell’s North Sea 
						operations involving helicopters and oil platforms 
						happened because someone remained silent about the same 
						type of cover-up and wrongdoing which I had felt 
						compelled to expose within Shell.
						
						
						 
						
						
						It was Mr Hee Len Hi who subsequently 
						orchestrated the above mentioned trumped up Domestic 
						Inquiry together with Mr. Rosli Lompoh involving flawed 
						evidence and intimidation of my assistant whom I 
						recruited for the domestic inquiry. Furthermore, I wish 
						to know who gave Len Hee and Rosli the instructions to 
						treat me badly and I believe that will be clearer after 
						my pending Industrial High Court case against Shell for 
						wrongful dismissal. I also have important information 
						directly relating to the Shell oil and gas reserves 
						scandal. It will be added to this document shortly.
						
						
						 
						
						
						Dr John Huong
						
						
						May 2004 
						
						
						 
						
							
							
							
							BOX 1
							
							 
							
							
							SUBJECT: Train of Events 
							leading to the Termination of Dr. John Huong Yiu 
							Tuong
							
							
							1. I was working for Sarawak Shell 
							Berhad/ Sabah Shell Petroleum Company Limited from 
							1974 to 2003. From 1974-1997, I was working in 
							various geological specialties and had built a 
							promising career from rank and file in the field of 
							Geology.
							
							
							2. In 1997, I was assigned to the 
							multi-billion dollar Kinabalu offshore platform 
							project as the only Production Geologist. The faulty 
							design rendered the Production Platform unsafe and 
							subject to sinking. This was not informed to 
							PETRONAS at the material time and I was punished 
							because I highlighted it officially during our 
							minuted official Project Team Meeting – the account 
							of the meeting was supposed to be supplied to 
							PETRONAS.
							
							
							3. Because of my stand on this matter 
							in consonant with Shell Group Business Principles 
							and governance and with the national interests in 
							mind, I was transferred out of the Kinabalu Project 
							(to the Ketam platform that has no production) 
							without any reasons being given.
							
							
							4. I raised my grievances and it 
							reached the Managing Director/ Chairman (MD/CH) 
							level and an Internal Investigation was conducted. 
							Resulting from this investigation, I was not 
							restored to my geology job, apparently an effort, to 
							cover up the flaws in the Kinabalu Project.
							
							
							5. I was posted by MD/CH to join (~2 
							Years) Public Affairs, a discipline which was 
							foreign lo my experience and training. It is 
							certainly not in line with my career placement and 
							progression.
							
							
							6. From here on, my career in Shell 
							lost its direction and this unsatisfactory situation 
							became a de-motivating factor. As 1 was moved from 
							one department to another, I was not given ample 
							time to learn the job. In all cases 1 was posted to 
							a job without any formal job description even though 
							I had asked for it again and again.
							
							
							7. From 1997 until 2003, I was not 
							only stressed and taken ill but also mis-treated by 
							my supervisors principally because of my problems 
							with Kinabalu project.
							
							
							8. In 2002, I was working under Mr. 
							Hee Len Hi who was General Manager for Technology 
							Management/Technical Services. Initially it was a 
							good relationship and he promised to help/restore me 
							in my career in Shell. I was very happy and I was 
							expecting that my career would be redeveloped and 
							well-ordered towards the realization of my ambition 
							to become a Professional Geologist.
							
							
							9. In mid 2002,1 was tracking a 
							Facility Verification Report pertaining to 
							helicopter services, a task given to me and was 
							informed by Operation Installation Managers of the 
							unprofessional work, thus " the passengers were told 
							to board the "seemingly" good chopper & eventually 
							ended up as "TEST CREWS" together with the pilots". 
							I highlighted this to Len HI who did not take it 
							very well and in fact quarrelled with me.
							
							
							10. Len Hi was not very happy with me 
							and moved me around in his department to a job for 
							which I was ill-prepared because I did not have the 
							experience and/or relevant qualification, nor was a 
							job description given to me which he promised for 
							months until a quarrel took place in his office. The 
							job required a Bachelor in Engineering Degree.
							
							
							11. In early 2003, he marked and 
							ranked me as a poor performer in his department 
							without giving me any indication throughout the year 
							that I was performing unsatisfactorily. The annual 
							letter informing all staff on their Bonus and 
							Increment was not given to me even after I asked 
							Max, my supervisor, and copied Len Hi.
							
							
							12. Eventually, Len Hi put up a 
							Domestic Inquiry together with HR for me with 
							charges that are incomplete and without reasonable 
							investigation into the allegations, nor was I given 
							reprimands, oral and/or written warnings, etc prior 
							to suspension. The Domestic Inquiry was not 
							conducted professionally and one of the objections 
							before the DI proper was threat of disciplinary 
							action against my Assistant that "the Company would 
							take disciplinary action against me for absent from 
							duty if I were to be John's Assistant". This is a 
							testimony I now got when I asked my Assistant who is 
							now retired as to why he was not present in the DI 
							which he promised. In addition, I was given a 
							termination letter 20 days after the official 
							closing of the Domestic Inquiry's proceedings.
							
							
							.
 
						
						
						 
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