A prescient letter from Ken Saro-Wiwa, published in the Mail&Guardian in May
1995 -
"A YEAR has gone by since I was rudely roused from my
bed
and clamped into detention. Sixty-five days in chains, weeks of
starvation, months of mental torture and, recently, the rides in a steaming,
airless Black Maria to appear before a kangaroo court,
dubbed a special
military tribunal, where the proceedings leave no doubt that the judgment has
been written in advance. And a sentence
of death against which there is no
appeal is a certainty.
Fearful odds? Hardly. The men who ordain and
supervise this show
of shame, this tragic charade, are frightened by the
word, the power of ideas, the power of the pen; by the demands of social justice
and the rights of man. Nor do they have a sense of history. They are so scared
of the power of the word, that they do not read. And that is
their funeral.
When, after years of writing, I decided to take the word to the
streets to mobilise the Ogoni people, and empower them to protest against the
devastation of their environment by Shell, and their denigration
and
dehumanisation by Nigeria's military dictators, I had no doubt where it could
end. This knowledge has given me strength, courage and cheer - and psychological
advantage over my tormentors.
Only yesterday, the Spirit of Ogoni
magicked into my cell a lovely
poem by Jack Mapanje, the veteran of Kamuzu
Banda's jails: four
years without charge. I had met Jack in Potsdam and
wondered how he had survived it all.
Writing from Leeds University,
his poem urged me to wear the
armour of humour. The note at the end was also
signed by Chengerai Hove, the award-winning Zimbabwean novelist. How wonderful
to know how many fine men, the best brains, care for one's distress.
Ultimately the fault lies at the door of the British government. It is the
British government which supplies arms and credit to the military dictators of
Nigeria, knowing full well that all such arms will only be
used against
innocent, unarmed citizens.
It is the British government which makes
noises about democracy in Nigeria and Africa but supports military dictators to
the hilt. It is the British government which supports the rape and devastation
of the
environment by a valued, tax-paying, labour-employing organisation
like Shell. I lay my travails, the destruction of the Ogoni and other
peoples in the Niger delta, at the door of the British government.
Ultimately, the decision is for the British people, the electorate, to stop this
grand deceit, this double standard, which has lengthened the
African
nightmare and denigrates humanity.
Whether I live or die is
immaterial. It is enough to know that there are
people who commit time,
money and energy to fight this one evil
among so many others predominating
worldwide. If they do not
succeed today, they will succeed tomorrow. We must
keep on
striving to make the world a better place for all of mankind - each
one
contributing his bit, in his or her own way.
Isalute you all. -
Ken Saro-Wiwa, Military Hospital, Port Harcourt, Nigeria."
"Whether I live or die is immaterial. We must keep on striving to make the world
a better place for all of mankind -- each one contributin his bit, in his or her
own way."