
‘It is insulting': Nigerian president's pardon of 'Ogoni Nine' draws ethnic group's rejection
Activists argue that Shell's pollution in the oil-rich Niger Delta remains unresolved and that Tinubu's push to resume oil drilling in Ogoniland underscores ongoing environmental and community injustices.
The executions of the Ogoni Nine sparked global outrage, and the Niger Delta's environmental devastation continues to highlight the broader economic and ethical tensions in Nigeria's reliance on oil revenues.
Nigeria's Ogoni activists on Friday rejected a posthumous pardon for nine members executed three decades ago by a military dictatorship, criticising President Bola Tinubu's move as inadequate and perpetuating injustice.
To commemorate Nigeria's Democracy Day on 12 June, Tinubu pardoned the men, known as the "Ogoni Nine", including writer Ken Saro-Wiwa, who were hanged after being tried by a military tribunal for their protests against Shell's pollution in the oil-rich Niger Delta, which is home to the Ogoni ethnic group.
The executions sparked international condemnation against Nigeria's then-military junta and continue to be a contentious issue in the nation's history.
"You cannot pardon someone that has not committed an offense; we are demanding total exoneration," said Celestine Akpobari, coordinator of the Ogoni Solidarity Forum.
"To say 'pardon', I think it is insulting. If there is any group who needs pardon, it is the Nigerian government that has committed so much crime against the Ogoni people," he told Reuters.
Tinubu's spokesperson rejected such criticism.
"The president has done what is normal. They can make an argument for exoneration and the president will look into it," Bayo Onanuga told Reuters.
Shell, which halted oil drilling in the area in the early 1990s and later sold its assets there, has denied any responsibility or wrongdoing.
Tinubu's efforts to resume oil drilling in Ogoniland have drawn fresh criticism from environmental activists.
Alagao Morris, deputy executive director of the Environmental Defenders Network, an interest group in the Niger Delta, said the pardon appeared to be an attempt to mollify the Ogoni people in the face of the region's continued environmental devastation.
"The pollution that ought to be addressed has not been addressed," Morris said.
He said the issue of oil drilling should be decided by the Ogoni people, but the complete exoneration of Saro-Wiwa and other executed activists should come first.
Nigeria, Africa's most populous country, relies on oil for more than 90% of export earnings and around two-thirds of government earnings, exposing its economy to global price shocks.
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