Over 15 years ago, I started a file of newspaper clipping and notes about Ken Saro-Wiwa, a Nigerian writer, environmentalist and tribal organizer who was hanged by the Abacha regime in November 1995.
Saro-Wiwa organized the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni people, a group of 500,000 or so who lived in the oil-rich but poor Ogoni region of Nigeria.
He'd made excellent progress and was starting to bring some real heat on Royal Dutch Shell at the time he was hanged along with other organizers. Here's some of what he said to the tribunal that was about to sentence him
"I repeat that we all stand before history. 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."
Anyway, these events really pissed me off at the time, but it all rapidly dropped away in the news, or at least in the news I read. I had no doubt from my following of the story over several years that Shell Oil was the one that should have been punished, but they seemed to get away with it. I stuck the file in a back drawer.
A couple of months ago, cleaning my office, I found the file folder stuffed with clippings again, and almost threw it away. I had long ago stopped being interested in Nigeria very much, although I did read a few more books about it, and other African countries, each of which is screwed up in some fashion. I sort of gave up on it, not that I actually lifted a finger to help, either. I tend to keep score on these sort of things, since somehow the injustice of it just sticks to me. I don't do anything, but it's easy for me to nurse a grudge, even for many years.
Now I read in the NYTimes that Ken Saro-Wiwa JUNIOR, whom I've never heard of, is making some real progress with bring Royal Dutch Shell to account.
Bravo!
Another clipping to add to the file