Ken Saro-Wiwa,
environmentalist, writer and human rights advocate, was
hanged on Friday 10th November after an unfair trial on
trumped-up charges before a tribunal appointed by
Nigeria's military government. His real crime was
embarrassing the government by campaigning against the
exploitation and degradation of his Ogoni tribal homeland
by the Nigerian government and by major oil companies,
notably Shell Ken had been held in prison for months
without trial. When asked if he was afraid to die, he
replied:
"I expect it. The men
we are dealing with are mindless stone age dictators
addicted to blood... responsible for the African
nightmare, afraid as they are of ideas and men of
ideas."
Two years ago yesterday a military
coup gave General Sani Abacha supreme power in Nigeria.
Almost at once, Amnesty
International began hearing reports of widespread and
cruel human rights violations as Abacha's forces moved to
crush, stifle or intimidate his political opponents.
Showing savage contempt for the law, the government took
away the power of courts to defend basic human rights. In
Nigeria now the political, economic and human rights
crisis is rapidly worsening.
Cursed by riches.
When he first came into conflict
with these ruthless politicians, Ken Saro-Wiwa was
already one of Africa's best known writers. Ken had taken
up the cause of his people, the Ogoni, who live in the
Niger delta, a region cursed by riches.
Ken campaigned against the
multi-national oil giants who, drawn by Ogoniland's rich
oil deposits, tore down the rainforests and turned the
landscape into a stinking mess. Ken told the world how
half a million Ogonis today suffer from levels of air,
soil and water pollution that would be intolerable in any
country where governments and oil companies were
accountable.
Ken Saro-Wiwa and his friends
sought justice for the Ogoni people. That search led him
to prison, where he was initially held for eight months
without trial and tortured. It brought him face to face
with the most difficult discovery a human being can make:
finding out whether he is prepared to place his ideals
before his own safety, maybe even before his life.
The spirit never dies.
Ken knew the generals would try to
silence him. He knew he was in danger. And though he
loved life as much as the next person, he did not allow
this to stop him going on with his work.
What can he have hoped to achieve
by making this brave stand? Perhaps his last words on the
gallows give us the answer: "Lord take my soul,
but the struggle continues."
Ken looked to us.
We have lost Ken Saro- Wiwa and his
friends, but for their deaths to make any sense, we must
make sure that their struggle for justice continues.
It is too late for them, but
hundreds of other prisoners still wait in Nigerian jails
without charge or hope of a fair trial. Among them is the
man who probably won the 1993 Presidential Election. We
can't be sure, since the government didn't allow the
result to be announced, but had him arrested.
They have held him in prison
without charge since June 1994. He is a sick man, whose
health was worsened by a policeman injuring him while
violently snatching away a book he was reading. The
Nigerian government have even imprisoned his doctor.
It is easy to forget these
prisoners. Ken's fame ensured him a place on the front
pages of every newspaper.
Celebrities queued up to campaign
on his behalf. The media have been full of details about
his case and the tragedy of the Ogoni.
But who will bear witness for the
forgotten casualties of Nigeria's human rights nightmare.
Bloodstained Trade.
Ken wanted the oil giants to
understand that lives are more important than profits.
He demanded of politicians and
industrialists that they clean up their own acts and stop
turning a blind eye to human rights abuse.
But as we have tragically seen,
governments and big corporations do have the will to act,
but often leave it to the eleventh hour, and then do too
little.
In Wellington last week,
Commonwealth leaders expressed outrage at the killing of
Ken Saro-Wiwa.
Tough questions.
We are glad that John Major called
the hangings an act of 'judicial murder'. We applaud the
British government for beginning to take action against
Nigeria. But we are also puzzled.
Amnesty has issued report after
report about the horrors in Nigeria. yet Mr. Major's'
government did nothing.
And it's not just Nigeria.
If Mr. Major is genuinely concerned
about human rights. why does his government continue to
sell arms to countries with appalling human rights
records?
Why sell Hawk military jets to
Indonesia where security forces continue to murder their
own people?
There must be very good reasons.
What are they, John?
Perhaps Britain. Australia and
other Commonwealth countries will make it clear why they
do not take action against killing, torture and
'disappearance' in Indonesian-occupied East Timor?
If you believe in justice and
freedom, if you think that torture has no part in a
civilised society, if you think that killing people is
not a legitimate way to pursue political aims. then
demand that governments honour their highfalutin'
declarations about human rights.
The world stood by and watched Ken
die.
Don't you stand by. Stand up for
your ideals.
To join Amnesty International,
write to: Amnesty International United Kingdom Section,
FREEPOST, London EC1B 1HE or phone 0345 611 116.
Robin Houston /
robin.houston@wadham.ox.ac.uk
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