| The Life of Ken Saro-Wiwa
The Ogoni Struggle
After the Executions
You can download the full story of the Life & Death
of Ken Saro-Wiwa with full references here.
(PDF 175kb)
Continued from the Ogoni Struggle
"I and my colleagues
are not the only ones on trial. Shell is here on trial and it is
as well that it is represented by counsel said to be holding a watching
brief. The Company has, indeed, ducked this particular trial, but
its day will surely come and the lessons learnt here may prove useful
to it for there is no doubt in my mind that the ecological war that
the company has waged in the Delta will be called to question sooner
than later and the crimes of that war be duly punished. The crime
of the Company’s dirty wars against the Ogoni people will
also be punished."
Ken Saro-Wiwa - 1995
Nine days after Okuntimo’s memo, on 21st
May, four conservative Ogoni leaders were killed in Gokana, giving
the military an excuse to "justify"
a military presence, to undertake “wasting
operations". There is no doubt the killings of the Ogoni
leaders were brutal. According to Human Rights Watch, “These
men were reportedly attacked by a mob and beaten and hacked to death,
but the precise chain of events leading to the murders is a source
of great controversy”.
There are "disputed"
reports as to what happened that day, according to the Unrepresented
Nations and Peoples Organisation (UNPO) that sent a delegation to
Ogoni in 1995, "with questions raised
by other circumstances around the murders". One of these
was the tension between the Gokana Ogoni chiefs and MOSOP, but MOSOP
denied any involvement in the killings.
Andrew Rowell writing in the book Green Backlash
argues that: "Other suspicious happenings
occurred that day too, which have led MOSOP to believe that the
whole event was a complete set-up. Eye witness accounts talk of
Ogoni ‘filled with soldiers’ in the morning before the
killings, as if they were waiting for something to happen. These
security forces did nothing when alerted of the disturbances to
prevent the killings, although they were asked to quash the growing
dissent. …There are too many other coincidences to suggest
that agent provocateurs were not used, although conclusive proof
will probably never be discernible."
An anonymous Ogoni interviewed for the film Delta
Force shown on Channel Four in the UK on 4th May 1995 recalls
how: "Everywhere
was quiet and then on the morning of May 21st … as we woke
up in the morning most of the Ogoni villages were filled with soldiers
and mobile policemen armed with sophisticated weapons. We don’t
know why they just came, it was only when 4 prominent Ogoni sons
were killed later in the afternoon of that day that we Ogoni ever
knew that there was a grand design to cause disturbances in Ogoni
in order to create an excuse for the government to send in more
troops".
The following day, Saro-Wiwa, Ledum Mitee and several
others were arrested in connection to the deaths, although not formally
charged. Amnesty International issued a statement that Saro-Wiwa's
arrest was "part of the continuing suppression
by the Nigerian authorities of the Ogoni people's campaign against
the oil companies" and declared Saro-Wiwa a
"prisoner of conscience - held because
of his non-violent political activities."
Whilst Saro-Wiwa was routinely tortured in prison,
put in leg-irons, and denied access to family, friends, a lawyer
and medication, the Internal Security Task Force, "ostensibly
searching for those directly responsible for the killings",
started "deliberately terrorising the
whole community, assaulting and beating indiscriminately",
according to Amnesty International. Over the next few months, hundreds
of Ogoni were arrested, beaten, intimidated and killed. Many young
girls, older women and pregnant women were raped. Thousands fled
in terror into the bush as Okuntimo's soldiers looted hundreds of
villages destroying houses in a systematic campaign of terror to
'sanitize Ogoni'. Okuntimo told a British environmentalist he detained
that "he was doing it all for Shell ...
But he was not happy because the last time he had asked Shell to
pay his men their out-station allowances he had been refused which
was not the usual procedure".
Later that year Saro-Wiwa and MOSOP were awarded
the Right
Livelihood Award (known as the alternative Nobel peace prize),
for Saro-Wiwa’s "exemplary and
selfless courage and in striving non-violently for the civil, economic
and environmental rights of his people". Some eight
months after being arrested in January 1995, Saro-Wiwa and four
other Ogoni were finally charged with the murder of the four Ogoni
leaders.
The following month an affidavit was signed by
one of the two chief prosecution witnesses, Charles Danwi. It alleged
that he had been bribed by Shell and others to testify against Saro-Wiwa.
It read: "He was told that he would be
given a house, a contract from Shell and Ompadec and some money
... He was given 30,000 Naira ... At a later meeting security agents,
government officials and …representatives of Shell and Ompadec
were all present." Another affidavit from the other
Chief prosecution witness, Nayone Akpa, was signed alleging that
he was offered "30,000 Naira, employment
with the Gokana Local Government, weekly allowances and contracts
with Ompadec and Shell" if he signed a document that
implicated Saro-Wiwa too.
Shell of course denies bribing the prosecution
witnesses, but it was meeting secretly with the Nigerian military
and government. In March 1995, a meeting took place between four
senior Shell officials, the Nigerian High Commissioner and the Nigerian
Army and Police at the Shell Centre in London where a strategy was
planned against the protests.
But the protests continued. Saro-Wiwa's brother,
Owens Wiwa, secretly met the head of Shell Nigeria, Brian Anderson
between May and July in order to explore ways of securing Saro-Wiwa's
release. Anderson told Owens that “He
would be able to help us get Ken freed if we stopped the protest
campaign abroad”.
The military tribunal/trial against Saro-Wiwa and
the others started in February 1995, when the men were finally allowed
to see their lawyers. In May 1995, Saro-Wiwa smuggled a letter out
of a military hospital. He wrote "For
two nights I have not slept a wink, I am being intimidated, harassed
and de-humanized, even though I am supposed to be receiving medical
attention ... I am like Ogoni, battered, bruised, brutalized, bloodied
and almost buried".
A Report into Saro-Wiwa’s trial written by
leading British counsel, Michael Birnbaum QC, concluded "It
is my view that the breaches of fundamental rights are so serious
as to arouse grave concern that any trial before this tribunal will
be fundamentally flawed and unfair". Amongst many misgivings,
Birnbaum was particularly concerned about the undue influence of
Major Okuntimo at the trial. In Late October, Saro-Wiwa and eight
other Ogoni were sentenced to death. Six of the fifteen defendants
were released, including Ledum Mitee, Vice President of MOSOP.
Saro-Wiwa wrote for his closing testimony at the
trial: "I and my colleagues are not the
only ones on trial. Shell is here on trial and it is as well that
it is represented by counsel said to be holding a watching brief.
The Company has, indeed, ducked this particular trial, but its day
will surely come and the lessons learnt here may prove useful to
it for there is no doubt in my mind that the ecological war that
the company has waged in the Delta will be called to question sooner
than later and the crimes of that war be duly punished. The crime
of the Company’s dirty wars against the Ogoni people will
also be punished."
As leaders of the Commonwealth gathered in Auckland,
the Nigerian government's Provisional Ruling Council confirmed the
death sentences. Despite Shell’s repeated claims it could
not get involved in the legal process in Nigeria, the company issued
a statement in response to the confirmation of the death sentences
which acknowledged that a letter had been sent to Abacha asking
for clemency.
On 10 November 1995, Saro-Wiwa
and eight others were executed in defiance of international appeals
for leniency. There was international condemnation and outrage against
both the military junta and Shell. The condemnation led to the strengthening
of limited sanctions, and Nigeria was suspended from the Commonwealth.
U.K. Prime Minister John Major, described the trial as, "a
fraudulent trial, a bad verdict, an unjust sentence. It has now
been followed by judicial murder".
After the Executions
You can download the full story of the
Life & Death of Ken Saro-Wiwa with full references here.
(PDF 175kb)
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