THISDAY

THE STRUGGLE CONTINUES

Owens Wiwa remembers his brother, Ken Saro-Wiwa, writer and environmen­tal rights activist, killed 20 years ago

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Twenty years ago this November, my brother, Ken Saro-Wiwa was executed for his work to rescue our Ogoni homeland in Nigeria from further destructio­n at the hands of Royal Dutch Shell. Not a day goes by that I don’t miss my brother, but he has especially been on

mind these last six months. I wish he could have seen the growing global movement rising up against Shell’s latest destructiv­e plan: drilling in the ecological­ly important and fragile Arctic. Activists took to the water in colourful kayaks, hung from a 200ft high bridge, sent letters to President Barack Obama and filled social media with cries of “Shell NO!”

In response, Shell was quoted by the news media as saying, “We have consistent­ly stated that we respect the right of individual­s to protest our Arctic operations so long as they do so safely and within the boundaries of law.” This false benevolenc­e was not in evidence on November 10, 1995, when Shell allowed my brother and eight of his compatriot­s to be put to death, by the Nigerian maximum dictator, General Sani Abacha, for protesting the company’s operations in Ogoniland. I do not know how Ken would have felt about the handover of the Nigerian Presidency from a Niger Deltan Jonathan to Ex military dictator Muhammadu Buhari. Former President Jonathan appointed Mr Justice Auta who sat on a military appointed Kangoroo Court that sentenced Ken to death as Chief Judge of Abuja High Court and gave a National Award to General Abacha. President Buhari described thieving Abacha whose family is still returning hundreds of millions of dollars of Nigeria’s stolen money as a ‘good man’ and quickly appointed Colonel Hameed Ali who commanded the affairs of the same murderous Kangoroo Court as the Comptrolle­r General of the Nigeria Custom. What kind of messages does this send to the people of the Niger Delta?

But I know what it is like to live amidst Shell’s oil operations. Ogoniland rests on some 1,000 square kilometres in the Niger Delta region of Southern Nigeria. In 1958, oil was discovered in Ogoniland and, over the next several decades, Shell became comfortabl­e in its occupation, taking our centuries old home as though it were their own. But, where the Ogoni had practiced caretaking and stewardshi­p for this place that fed and provided for us, Shell left a trail of environmen­tal devastatio­n and terrible health impacts on the people still living there.

The slow poisoning of the land and water began almost immediatel­y. There were constant oil spills and uncontroll­ed flares. Once thriving fishing areas grew too toxic to support even the smallest creatures and the mangroves — which acted as nurseries for marine life in its infancy — were choked at the roots. Their once bountiful leaves stripped away, leaving behind only skeletons.

When my brother insisted that Shell was committing genocide, the company bristled at the suggestion and took exception to his use of such an emotive word. Well now and independen­t study funded by shell has provided compelling evidence and data that goes some way to vindicatin­g my brother’s claims. The UNEP report on the environmen­tal devastatio­n in Ogoni lays the blame of ecological waste of my community firmly at Shell’s door and reports that it may take 25-30 years to clean up our environmen­t. To me this sounds like the un-definition of genocide.

We have lost our land and livelihood. And I lost my brother Ken. But Shell says it respects the right of individual­s to protest.

It was 1990 when my brother, a brilliant writer, founded the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP). It was clear that Shell had no regard for the Ogoni people or this land which had been our home since before recorded history. By this time, Ken had already spent more than 20 years advocating for greater Ogoni autonomy, at one point sacrificin­g a prestigiou­s position as Regional Commission­er for Education in the Rivers State cabinet for his beliefs.

With MOSOP, Ken spoke and wrote about our plight. He educated and organised. He opened eyes to the great cost being paid in the pursuit of the great rewards Shell promised, and raised voices in solidarity and hope.

On January 4, 1993, 300,000 Ogoni celebrated the Year of Indigenous Peoples by protesting Shell. My brother addressed the crowd saying, “We have woken up to find our lands devastated by agents of death called oil companies. Our atmosphere has been totally polluted, our lands degraded, our waters contaminat­ed, our trees poisoned, so much so that our flora and fauna have virtually disappeare­d.” The show of strength in the face of their oppression worried Shell’s leadership and, in a partnershi­p as horrifying as it is unbelievab­le, the company began conspiring with the Nigerian military. Soldiers — operating with financial support from Shell — brutalised the Ogoni people, then took my brother into custody, tortured him and ultimately put him to death. All for trying to prevent Shell from leaving Ogoniland an empty, poisoned husk. But Shell says it respects the right of individual­s to protest. A study by the United Nations Environmen­t Programme has shown that, despite the fact that no oil production has taken place in Ogoniland since 1993, oil spills continue to occur with fierce regularity. The production facilities that Shell used to crowd out farmers and fishermen have fallen to rust and ruin, and neglected, antiquated pipelines continue to leak oil as they snake from other parts of Nigeria through Ogoniland. Fishermen and farmers can no longer make their living or feed their families from the water or the field. Wiwa is a medical doctor and a human rights activist

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