Untitled Document
UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
Fourth Session
New York, 16-27 May 2005
Item 4-Human Rights
Joint Statement by the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni
People (MOSOP) and the National Youth Council of the Ogoni People (NYCOP)
Statement by Legborsi Saro Pyagbara, representative of the Movement for
the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) and the National Youth Council of
the Ogoni People (NYCOP)
Madam Chairperson,
Thank you for giving me yet another opportunity to address
this forum. I am Legborsi Saro Pyagbara.
The situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of Indigenous
peoples all over the world remains precarious. To us in Ogoni and our brothers
in the Niger Delta, the enjoyment of human rights is still a very distant luxury
as we daily face the violations of all the fundamental human rights that the
United Nations set out to protect over fifty years ago with the Universal Declaration
on Human Rights. Our trees, our animals, our waters and the plains continue
to fall under the devastating firepower of the violations of our fundamental
human rights.
Madam Chairperson and members of this Forum, the year 2005
marks a special year for the Ogoni people, the peoples of the Niger Delta and
lovers and protectors of the environment all over the world. This year marked
the tenth year since the military establishment in Nigeria led by Gen. Sanni
Abacha marched nine Ogoni sons including the charismatic Ogoni leader and defender
of the environment, Ken Saro Wiwa, that eerie morning of November 10, 1995 to
the gallows where they were hanged for standing up to demand respect for the
Indigenous rights of the Ogoni people and other Indigenous communities in the
Niger Delta. That very violation of the highest human rights-The Right to life
still continues in the Delta.
The collaborative flames of Shell that snuffed live out of
Ken Saro Wiwa and fellow compatriots still dot the Niger Delta skyline till
today. The mangrove trees for which Ken Saro Wiwa and others laid down their
lives continue to be threatened by the flares of the oil companies and many
had fallen to the toxicity of oil spills.
Following the hanging of Ken Saro Wiwa and co., the United
Nations Secretary General, sent a Fact Finding team to Nigeria. The team visited
Ogoni and made recommendations to the government, some of which include redress
to the Ogoni People including financial relief to the survivors and assistance
in improving the socio-economic conditions of the Ogoni people and the Niger
Delta in general. Yet in the intervening years, nothing has happened to the
recommendations. The Nigeria government has consigned the report and its recommendations
to the dustbin of history. The same level of impunity has also been meted to
the African Commission ruling in the case between the Nigeria government and
the Ogoni people.
Distinguished members of this forum, will you continue to keep
quiet while the Nigeria government go away with this high level of brazen impunity
that touches on the very relevance of this Forum to meet the aspirations of
Indigenous peoples all over the world?
In two separate reports recently, the Nigeria government was
condemned for the increasing violations of human rights of peoples in the Niger
Delta by both state and non-state actors. In the report titled "Nigeria:
Are human rights in the pipeline", Amnesty International accuses the Nigerian
government of failing to "rigorously protect human rights" in the
Niger Delta. This failure, the organization said, is fueling violations of civil,
political, economic, social and cultural rights in the oil-rich area. The report
examined human rights relating to the practices of some oil companies.
Speaking in the same vein, the Special Representative of the
Secretary-General on Human Rights Defenders, who ended her visit to Nigeria
about a week ago also condemned environmental damage in oil producing communities
in Ogoni and the Niger Delta region, which according to her creates social difficulties
and health problems. She also said that human rights group in the country are
operating in a state of insecurity.
Madam Chairperson, between 2003 and 2004, not less than seventy
Ogoni persons were arrested for their continuing insistence on the Nigeria government
to address the questions that had been raised by the Ogoni Struggle. Within
this period, I was arrested and detained twice by the government.
The Rivers State government had also embarked on the demolition
and forced evictions of people from an area of Port Harcourt called the Agip
Waterfronts. As the people were forcefully evicted, the government made no alternative
provisions for them violating their rights to housing. About five thousand Ogoni
people has been affected. A case of double displacement for people who have
been earlier displaced from their homes in Ogoni during the military repression.
The political rights of the Ogoni people are also being denied
them. They continue to suffer lack of participation in the political process
because of the faulty electoral process in the country.
Madam Chairperson, in the light of these, we respectfully
demand that:
1. The Permanent Forum, as a mark of solidarity with the suffering
Indigenous Ogoni People on the tenth anniversary of the Commemoration of the
hanging, requests the Nigeria government to clear the names of the Ogoni nine
from the terrible crimes which were imputed to their names. In doing this, we
are not demanding anything that is new. The present government has cleared the
names of some people from the majority tribes who were falsely accused by the
Abacha government. An example is Gen Shehu Musa Yar Adua who has gotten national
edifices and monuments in his honour but Saro Wiwa and co. continue to suffer
this indignity even in death because they are from a powerless Indigenous Community.
2. The Permanent Forum conducts a workshop for the elaboration
of a framework for the Rights Based Approach (RBA) to the realization of the
Millennium Development Goals and the inclusion of Indigenous peoples. Without
a rights-based approach, the realization of the MDGs in our respective homelands
will remain a pipe dream.
3. We request the Permanent Forum to join the campaign for
a greater legal liability for multinationals who have emerged to become one
of the greatest non-state violators of human rights.
4. The Permanent Forum urges the Special Rapporteur on Indigenous
Peoples to issue an urgent alert to the Nigeria government on the deteriorating
situation of human rights in the country and also the intense pressure on the
Ogoni people and their neighbours in the Niger Delta.
5. The Permanent Forum request the government of Nigeria to
stop the demolitions and forced evictions of people including about 5000 Ogonis
from the Agip Water fronts in Port Harcourt and make arrangements for the resettlement
of those whose homes have been demolished.
6. The Nigeria government and U.N. agencies give support to
the Nigeria’s Human Rights Commission to monitor the respect for Indigenous
rights and to indigenous communities.
7. That the Nigeria government ends the militarization of
the Niger Delta and adopts the ethnic variable in the forthcoming National Population
Census.
Thank you for listening.
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