Ken Saro-Wiwa's exoneration and MOSOP's craving for new beginning
(Nigeria) For the Ogoni people, the murder of Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight
others on November 10, 1995 turned a very dark side of our country's history.
It reinforced our fears of an obvious genocide being prosecuted against our
people, the Ogoni, and we trembled in the face of a possible extinction having
suffered much repression coupled with the environmental terror unleashed by
Royal Dutch Shell leading to the death of thousands of the Ogoni people.
We are aware that Ken Saro-Wiwa was innocent and suffered
persecution from those who benefited from the unjust Nigerian system. As an
Ogoni, it is truly despicable to come from the most naturally endowed section
of our country, Nigeria, and to sit and watch those to whom we have committed
the responsibility to manage our collective destiny take away all that belong
to the Ogoni, use discriminatory laws to oppress the Ogoni and send us to death
while our resources make huge budgets for people who bear no pain from the
consequences of our natural resource exploitation.
The Ogoni people have lost everything due to Shell's
reckless and irresponsible business practices. Our streams, our natural
environment, farms, businesses, rain water and our very lives have been wrecked
by Shell. Over 90 percent of Ogoni youths have no jobs and do not have any hope
of finding one in the near future. Yet, Ogoni has more oil and gas resources
than every other Niger Delta state in Nigeria and can generate more revenue
than 20 Nigerian states put together.
Pained by these deprivations, Ken Saro-Wiwa rose to
challenge the inequalities and sought some dose of equity. In response, Shell
funded a military clampdown on the Ogoni and provided the logistics which led
to the death of over 4,000 Ogonis. A simple demand for justice was being
treated like a violent rebellion in a country that will turn to give amnesty
and honor to murderers who brutally killed Nigerians and went to the extent of
taking up arms against the state.
While our country has encouraged violence, armed struggle
and discouraged peaceful agitations, the Ogoni people today are yet to get a
proper response for the request to exonerate their innocent loved ones killed
by the state on November 10, 1995.
This year marks 25years after Ken Saro-Wiwa's murder and
there are numerous lessons it offers. One pitiable narrative is the obvious
path to self destruction our country is toeing by not encouraging peaceful and
non-violent methods. It is possible that had the Nigerian state encouraged
peaceful methods which Ken Saro-Wiwa championed, the Nigerian people would have
seen the gains of peaceful agitation and we may never have had to lose our
soldiers and expended much on military hardware to fight Boko Haram and the
Bandits in the Niger Delta.
The lessons are painful but we have to learn from them and
make amends to save our country. Ken Saro-Wiwa is still the bridge and the keys
to unraveling Nigeria's greatness for only in a peaceful atmosphere can we make
real practical progress and achieve development for our communities.
It is time to celebrate Ken Saro-Wiwa's novelty in
championing such a massive struggle of the Ogoni people without violence. We
need to encourage our young people to learn from Ken Saro-Wiwa for it will save
us much human and financial resources, save our country from lawlessness and
make government business easy.
As we approach November 10, 2020, the 25th memorial of the
hangings, we must prepare a perfect gift to clear the names of these peaceful,
innocent, unique gentlemen and exceptional personalities, to announce their
innocence and exonerate them from the crimes for which our country got them
killed for they were truly innocent and that had been acknowledged by world
leaders including the United Nations and the Commonwealth. I still recall that
irked by the 1995 Ogoni executions and deception that emanated out of Aso Rock
on that black day, the CommonWealth of Nations had suspended Nigeria from its
membership with a bang reflecting its rejection of Nigeria's indecency under
Abacha. Former British Prime Minister John Major had described Saro-Wiwa's
condemnation as a bad verdict and hiis hanging a judicial murder.
Exonerating Ken Saro-Wiwa and those killed with him is
definitely the gateway to resolving the Ogoni conflicts and as president of
MOSOP and successor of Ken Saro-Wiwa, I will state unequivocally with every
amount of responsibility that resolving the Ogoni conflicts at this time
depends on how we handle the request for the exoneration of these nine Ogonis.
We have to act now if we are truly committed to reconciliation and development
in Ogoni and Nigeria.
Ken Saro-Wiwa's murder significantly dented the integrity
and decency of our country and we must at this time chat a new cause for our
country and for the Ogoni people. Like a launderer, we have to apply in the
most subtle ways, the reagents that can gradually clear off the stains.
We must also not let the polluter and killer of the Ogoni
people get away with the crime of instigating violence to kill the Ogoni. Shell
should be punished for its crimes in Ogoni by sending them out of Nigeria.
Shell should not be encouraged to do to any other section of the Niger Delta,
what they have done to the Ogoni people.
Indeed, Shell as a company is a monster. Shortly after
Saro-Wiwa's murder, the first response of Shell was to resume oil mining in
Ogoni. They created an Ogoni re-entry department and sponsored media and
physical assaults on the human rights activists in Ogoni. Several others died
through the bullets of security men attached to Shell as local Ogoni dwellers
resisted the plans to resume oil production in Ogoni. Indeed, Shell did not
only encourage Nigeria's brutality against the Ogoni people, it funded the
repression and turned our natural blessings into a curse.
But the struggle for true freedom and happiness continues.
The Ogoni people today continue to stand for the cause for which Ken Saro-Wiwa
and all others died. We demand justice for them and for our people whose lives
have been turned miserable by Shell's irresponsibility.
We know too well that Albert Badey, Edward Kobani,
Theophilus Orange and Samuel Orange would not have died at the time they did
but for Shell's unfortunate irresponsibility in Ogoni.
The fact of Saro-Wiwa's innocence cannot be contradicted.
The government has well acknowledged this but have failed to legalize the
obvious. They name streets after him, they celebrate his bravery, creativity
and courage. They have tacitly admitted his irreproachability, but are not
courageous to publicly admit that they killed him in his Innocence. This
applies also to the eight others on the one hand and the other four on the
other hand.
But for the Ogoni people, Ken Saro-Wiwa's Innocence and the
need for his exoneration along with all others murdered with him have become a
key component of Ogoni demands. The Ogoni people cannot celebrate any freedom
and victory over Shell no matter the benefits offered while our dear Ken
Saro-Wiwa, John Kpuinen, Nordu Eawo, Saturday Doobee, Felix Nuate, Baribor Bera
and all others remain chained in death.
The exoneration of Ken Saro-Wiwa is the key to true
reconciliation between all parties to the Ogoni conflict and remains the only
consolation we can offer for the Wiwa family who gave us Ken. Ken had been so
dear to the Ogoni people that even in death, he is still the bridge leading to
the other side of our story and we call on the government to be human in dealing
with this issue and give us a reason to still feel there is a good side of our
country.
Ken Saro-Wiwa, John Kpuinen, Baribor Bera, Paul Lebura,
Daniel Gbokoo, Nordu Eawo, Felix Nuate, Saturday Doobee and Nubari Kiobel
should be cleared from the crimes for which they were framed and killed for
they were truly innocent. That, I repeat, is the easy route to resolve the
Ogoni problem and turn our focus to Ogoni development.
As we approach the 25th anniversary of Ken Saro-Wiwa's
murder on November 10, 2020, we hope the Nigerian government will take this
opportunity to exonerate the nine men, repair the image battery that came with
their execution, move us all towards reconciliation and enjoy the goodwill that
will come with it which no other government before now could do. That will be
our perfect gift for Ken Saro-Wiwa and the other eight. I do feel very
convinced about how it will heal a lot of injuries and make the Ogoni people
feel like they are Nigerians and will never again be so repressed by their own
government.
Ken Saro-Wiwa is still a metaphor for the systemic injustice
Nigeria has prosecuted against the small and weak through laws and decrees. He
lived to address these inequalities and gave hope to the numerous groups whose
voices are not heard, peoples who have daily grappled with Nigeria''s
oppressive oligarchy. Ken was killed for standing for justice and demanding
respect for the rights of peoples whose dignity have been taken away by a
mindless capitalist called Shell and an unjust system called Nigeria. It is
twenty five years since Ken Saro-Wiwa was murdered by the Nigerian State and it
still seems like yesterday.
If Shell, a foreign company, casts a gloomy picture over the Ogoni, our government should take off that cast and let the light of hope shine with the rights of the people being respected. We should commence that process with one of the actions the Ogoni people have been very passionate about - the exoneration of innocent Ken Saro-Wiwa and the eight others. That is MOSOP's craving at this time and we are confident it will take us to a new beginning.
Fegalo Nsuke is human rights activist and President of the Movement for the
Survival of the Ogoni People MOSOP. He wrote from Abuja, Nigeria.
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