SARO-WIWA FAMILY REACTS TO NATIONAL HONOUR, PARDON FROM TINUBU

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SARO-WIWA’S FAMILY REACTS TO NATIONAL HONOUR, PARDON FROM TINUBU

The reaction from Saro-Wiwa’s family to the national honours differs from that the renowned environmentalist, Nnimmo Bassey, who said that “Ken Saro-Wiwa and the others deserve to be honoured. But coming at a time when the government is desperate to jack up oil production, while pollution continues unabated, the move is ill-timed.”

The family of Ken Saro-Wiwa says President Bola Tinubu’s conferment of national honours on Mr Saro-Wiwa and eight other Ogoni leaders executed in 1995 by the Nigerian military dictator, Sani Abacha, “symbolises the innocence of these heroes”.

The family thanked Mr Tinubu for the honours.

Mr Saro-Wiwa and the others were executed because of their struggle for environmental justice for their oil-rich community in the Niger Delta region.

Mr Tinubu, during his address at the joint session of the National Assembly on Thursday, 12 June, to mark Nigeria’s 2025 Democracy Day, conferred posthumous national honours on Mr Saro-Wiwa (CON) and the others – Saturday Dobee (OON), Nordu Eawo (OON), Daniel Gbooko (OON), Paul Levera (OON), Felix Nuate (OON), Baribor Bera (OON), Barinem Kiobel (OON), and John Kpuine (OON).

He hinted that his administration would give a state pardon to the late Ogoni leaders.

“I shall also be exercising my powers under the prerogative of mercy to grant these national heroes a full pardon, together with others whose names shall be announced later in conjunction with the National Council of State,” the president stated in his address.

Saro-Wiwa’s family reacts

“We want to believe that the conferment of these national honours symbolises the innocence of these heroes and further re-enforces the global view that the judgement given almost 30 years ago was flawed and their execution considered to be judicial murder,” Mr Saro-Wiwa’s family said in a statement issue on 13 June, a day after Mr Tinubu’s remark.

The statement was signed by Noo Saro-Wiwa, a British-Nigerian author and daughter of the late Mr Saro-Wiwa.

She said their father and the eight other Ogoni leaders “were innocent and peaceful activists who drew the attention of the world to the plight of the Ogoni people who suffered environmental devastation due to oil drilling by Shell.”

“While thanking President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for doing the right thing, we further request a review of the judicial proceedings leading to the erroneous judgement, which occasioned such a colossal loss to our family, the Ogoni people and concerned Nigerians.

“Such a review will heal all wounds and… lead to a complete exoneration of our heroes,” she added.

The reaction from Saro-Wiwa’s family to the national honours differs from that of the renowned environmentalist, Nnimmo Bassey, who told PREMIUM TIMES that “Ken Saro-Wiwa and the others deserve to be honoured. But coming at a time when the government is desperate to jack up oil production, while pollution continues unabated, the move is ill-timed.”

Mr Bassey, the director of Health of Mother Earth Foundation, re-stated his long-held view that the Nigerian government must exonerate the Ogoni Nine of the crimes for which they were accused, instead of considering a pardon.

“A mere pardon at this time appears to be aimed at reopening the oil wells in Ogoniland — a step that would mean dancing on the graves of the murdered leaders. Exoneration is the political action we demand of the government to bring a closure to the environmental genocide and other crimes committed against the Ogoni people,” Mr Bassey told PREMIUM TIMES, Friday, a day after the president’s remark.

In 2021, Mr Bassey and leaders of 10 other civil society organisations issued a statement rejecting a similar plan for state pardon for Mr Saro-Wiwa and others by the then-President Muhammadu Buhari.

The Ken Saro-Wiwa Foundation had also rejected Mr Buhari’s plan for pardon.

“His death remains a matter that is yet to be resolved because the state necessarily has to exonerate him of the false charges and the kind of kangaroo judgment that was given by that tribunal.

“Besides, the state has to apologise to the victims and to the Ogoni people for executing them when the appeal period had not even elapsed,” Mr Bassey said in a 2018

Bassey said 10 November, the day the Ogoni Nine were executed, has always been a day for sober reflection for him.

“The day he was executed in 1995, I was at that time the secretary-general of the Association of Nigerian Authors.

“We were having our annual conference at the University of Lagos, and we were debating whether to issue a statement pleading with Abacha to have mercy and cancel the death sentence or to issue a hard-line statement condemning the atrocities of his dictatorship. Why that debate was going on, we got the news that they had been executed.

“So, it is always a very sad day for me.

“The campaign of Ken Saro-Wiwa was focused on environmental justice.

About Dons Eze

DONS EZE, PhD, Political Philosopher and Journalist of over four decades standing, worked in several newspaper houses across the country, and rose to the positions of Editor and General Manager. A UNESCO Fellow in Journalism, Dr. Dons Eze, a prolific writer and author of many books, attended several courses on Journalism and Communication in both Nigeria and overseas, including a Postgraduate Course on Journalism at Warsaw, Poland; Strategic Communication and Practical Communication Approach at RIPA International, London, the United Kingdom, among others.

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