logo
Nigerian leader's pardon of executed Ogoni activists draws criticisms

Nigerian leader's pardon of executed Ogoni activists draws criticisms

Independent13-06-2025

Nigeria's President Bola Tinubu has posthumously pardoned nine environmental activists executed 30 years ago by the then-ruling military junta, drawing sharp criticism and anger from activists who argued on Friday that the individuals committed no crime.
During an event Thursday to mark the 26th anniversary of Nigeria's return to democracy, Tinubu pardoned the 'Ogoni Nine,' including celebrated writer Ken Saro-Wiwa, and described them as 'national heroes.'
The men were convicted of murdering four local chiefs and were hanged in 1995 by the then-military regime led by Gen. Sani Abacha. They were part of the Ogoni ethnic group in the oil-rich Niger Delta region, and had protested environmental pollution in the region by multinational oil companies, particularly Shell.
Their trial and murder sparked international outrage at the time, with rights groups calling it unjust and lacking credible evidence.
Local rights and civil society groups described Tinubu's pardon as misleading and 'insulting.'
'A pardon is given to people who have been convicted of wrongdoing," said Ken Henshaw, executive director of local rights group We The People.
Henshaw said the process leading to their execution did not prove that they were guilty of the allegations against them. 'For him (Tinubu) to say he wants to pardon them is a misnomer,' he added.
The Nigerian government must also recognize formally that the murdered activists are 'innocent of any crime and fully exonerate them,' said Isa Sanusi, Amnesty International Nigeria's director.
'Full justice for the Ogoni Nine is only a first step," said Sanusi. 'Much more needs to be done to get justice for communities in the Niger Delta, including holding Shell and other oil companies to account for the damage they have done and continue to do.'
____

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Suspected suicide bomber kills 12 in Nigeria's Borno state
Suspected suicide bomber kills 12 in Nigeria's Borno state

Reuters

time5 hours ago

  • Reuters

Suspected suicide bomber kills 12 in Nigeria's Borno state

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria, June 21 (Reuters) - A suspected female suicide bomber killed at least 12 people and injured several others at a fish market on Friday night in Nigeria's northeastern Borno state, police said on Saturday. Borno state police spokesperson Nahum Kenneth Daso said in a statement that a woman with an improvised explosive device strapped to her body, infiltrated a crowd at the fish market before detonating it among civilians. Daso said those injured were taken to hospital. Local residents said at least 30 people were injured. Borno state is the heartland of an insurgency - primarily driven by the Islamist armed group Boko Haram - that has been raging for the past 16 years, killing thousands and displacing at least 2 million people, according to aid agencies.

How di security palava Nigeria dey face fit affect food supply and price
How di security palava Nigeria dey face fit affect food supply and price

BBC News

time10 hours ago

  • BBC News

How di security palava Nigeria dey face fit affect food supply and price

As kasala dey increase for Nigeria, especially for northern part of di kontri, wia unknown gunmen, Boko Haram/ISWAP, bandits, herders and farmers dey clash, di place wey dem also sabi for big farming don dey face serious palava. As rainy season dey try reach im peak, farmers dey fear to go farm becos dem no wan risk dia life or make bandits kidnap dem. For recent weeks, kasala wey happun for North east, North west and North central don claim many lives and properties. Dis areas na places wey dey produce plenty food for Nigeria. Recently, Ministry of Agriculture for Nigeria release one internal memo wey tok say make dia staff fast for three days sake of food wahala for di kontri. Dis move show how serious di mata be. For 2024 alone, World Food Program report say kasala, insecurity, inflation and climate wahala go make hunger worse for Nigeria, and say 26.5 million pipo go face serious hunger. National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) tok say food inflation rate for October 2024 na 39.16% compared to 31.52% for October 2023. Experts believe say insecurity na one of di major reasons wey cause dis kain inflation. Experts still tok say goment need to do more to fight insurgency or find modern farming ways becos farmers for north dey fear to go farm. How security wahala fit affect food security and price dis year? Secretary of All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN), Dr Yunusa Halidu, tell BBC Pidgin say insecurity na one of di reasons wey dey cause food wahala and food inflation. "Before dis insecurity wahala, many states for north dey farm plenty food, and food dey cheap for market," oga Halidu tok. "If no be for insecurity, Zamfara alone fit feed di whole kontri afta harvest." E believe say na insecurity cause di food inflation wey Nigeria dey face. "Lack of food na one of di reasons why food price rise for recent years, and na insecurity cause am. You know say di more pipo dey need sometin, di more di price go up," e tok. E mention say some northern states dey produce rice, wey Nigerians dey chop well-well, but rice and oda food production don reduce. "States like Borno, Yobe, Katsina, Zamfara, Sokoto and Kebbi sabi farm rice, but sake of insecurity, dem dey produce small rice now." Halidu add say "Na only Jigawa for all di northern states dey farm witout security wahala, sake say bandits no too dey dia." E still tok say if federal goment fit solve insecurity and provide farming support, Nigeria no go get food wahala and food go cheap for evribodi. Wetin be di solution? Dr Angarawai Ijantiku Ignatius wey sabi farming well-well and be Country Representative for International Crops Research Institute for Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) for Kano, tell BBC Pidgin say federal goment need to embraced and invest for modern farming. "But no mata di modern innovation, we still need land. But for small scale, we get wetin we dey call homegrown food. Pipo fit use bucket or cement bag put soil and plant yam, pepper or onion for house. E fit feed family of two or three." E tok say anoda modern way na make goment provide community-based place wey farmers fit plant and harvest. "We get new technology wey we dey call community-based farming programme, wia we go give farmers free training on di new method. How dem fit farm and harvest quick and distribute am for community," Dr Ignatius tok. "But for dis one, we need community vigilante to protect farmers." E also tok say dem suppose dey help farmers get fertiliser by using compost, since some places bandits no dey allow dem go outside village. But e still tok say homegrown food na just support, e no fit reach evriwia. On di oda hand, anoda expert wey sabi security mata for Kano, Dr Auwal Abdullahi, tok say Nigerian goment suppose try anoda way to fight insurgency. E tell BBC Pidgin say for over 10 years, goment dey use force fight insurgents, but e suggest say make dem try dialogue. "Make goment understand and work wit security pipo, community and gada intelligence. For farming season, goment need to work wit community and if possible, negotiate wit bandits" im tok. E say dis method work for Birnin Gwari local goment for Kaduna State. Dr Abdullahi also tok say if dem use peaceful method to tok to bandits make dem drop arms and stop banditry, kidnapping and cattle rustling, farmers go fit go farm and e go help Nigeria economy grow.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store