Does any obstacles to moral behavior exist on operations of
Does any \"obstacles to moral behavior\" exist on operations of Unocal Burma Case.
Solution
In 1995, Unocal, an oil and gas enterprise based in California, took a 29 percent stake in a partnership with the French oil company Total and state-owned companies from both Myanmar and Thailand to build a gas pipeline from Myanmar to Thailand.
 At the time, the $1 billion project was expected to
 bring Myanmar about $200 million in annual export earnings,
 a quarter of the country’s total. The gas used domestically
 would increase Myanmar’s generating
 capacity by 30 percent. This investment was made when
 a number of other American companies were exiting
 Myanmar. Myanmar’s government, a military dictatorship,
 had a reputation for brutally suppressing internal
 dissent. Citing the political climate, the apparel companies
 Levi Strauss and Eddie Bauer had both withdrawn
 from the country. But as far as Unocal’s management
 was concerned, the giant infrastructure project would
 generate healthy returns for the company and, by boosting
 economic growth, a better life for Myanmar’s 43 million
 people. Moreover, while Levi Strauss and Eddie
 Bauer could easily shift production of clothes to another
 low-cost location, Unocal argued it had to go where the
 oil and gas were located.
 However, Unocal’s investment quickly became highly
 controversial. Under the terms of the contract, the government
 of Myanmar was contractually obliged to clear a
 corridor for the pipeline through Myanmar’s tropical
 forests and to protect the pipeline from attacks by the
 government’s enemies. According to human rights
 groups, the Myanmar army forcibly moved villages and
 ordered hundreds of local peasants to work on the
 pipeline in conditions that were no better than slave labor.
 Those who refused to comply suffered retaliation.
 News reports cite the case of one woman who was
 thrown into a fire, along with her baby, after her husband
 tried to escape from troops forcing him to work on the project. The baby died and she suffered burns. Other villagers
 reported being beaten, tortured, raped, and otherwise
 mistreated when the alleged slave labor
 conditions were occurring.
 In 1996, human rights activists brought a lawsuit
 against Unocal in the United States on behalf
 of 13 Myanmar villagers who had fled to
 refugee camps in Thailand. The suit claimed
 that Unocal was aware of what was going on,
 even if it did not participate or condone it, and
 that awareness was enough to make Unocal in
 part responsible for the alleged crimes. The presiding
 judge dismissed the case on the grounds that
 Unocal could not be held liable for the actions of a foreign
 government against its own people—although the
 judge did note that Unocal was aware of what was going
 on in Myanmar. The plaintiffs appealed, and in late 2003
 the case wound up at a superior court. This time, the
 plaintiffs’ legal strategy hinged upon the use of a law that
 had been on the books since 1792 but was largely ignored
 for 200 years. Known as the Alien Tort Claims Act
 (ATCT) of 1792, this law allows foreigners to sue each
 other in U.S. courts. The ATCT law is being used to allow
 the foreign plaintiffs to sue the Myanmar subsidiary of
 Unocal for damages.
 Most legal scholars believe that Unocal may ultimately be able to dodge any legal liability, there is little doubt that one can question the ethical validity of Unocal’s decision to enter into partnership with a brutal military dictatorship for financial gain.
So there does not exist any obstacle to moral behavior on Unocal Burma Case.


