The toxicity level in Ogoni today is such that we can conclude that Ogoniland is currently awaiting its formal burial.
The death of everything - land fishes, seas, vegetation, men, women and children are expected as pollution has turned
everything including foods and water into toxic products.
The genocide in Ogoniland and the entire Niger Delta may eventually be difficult to redress if nothing is done to help
now. This amounts to gross human rights violation, but is truly regrettable and unfortunate as it is being prosecuted
with the endorsement of our own government. Nigeria has aided a third party, Shell in this instance, bring death to its
own people and nothing is being done to punish or at least remediate.
One study by MOSOP (Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People) reveal that 4 out of every 10 child born in Ogoni
will die in 90 days. Another study by a Swiss professor shows the death rate is as high as 70 percent within 3 months.
Despite these terrifying reports the Nigerian government continue to encourage the oil industry whose sole aim is to
further plunder our resources and trample on our collective dignity as a people sponsoring local actors against the
collective position of our people as articulated in the Ogoni Bill of Rights and driven by MOSOP, thereby creating a
potential for crises in Ogoniland.
Most recently Shell's allies in the Nigerian oil industry particularly Belema Oil Producing, Robo Micheal Limited Shell
Petroleum (SPDC) and the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company Ltd (NPDC) had been vigorously sponsoring local actors
and groups to cause division in Ogoni.
One major strategy of the oil industry and the groups they sponsor is deceit. Currently their is a battle between the
supporters of Robo Micheal and those of Belema Oil. Those who are sponsored by Belema Oil see nothing good in those
sponsored by Robo Micheal and vice versa. Government and the oill industry in Nigeria hopes that their divide and rule
tactics will defeat the collective wishes of the Ogoni people which MOSOP insists must be respected.
The Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) has prescribed a multi-stakeholder dialogue involving the
three principal parties to the conflict namely, the federal government of Nigeria, Shell and MOSOP (representing the
Ogoni people). This process has to be driven by a negotiator. But the government refers a divide and conquer approach
driven by the oil industry notably Shell, Belema Oil, the NPDC and Robo Micheal Limited.
MOSOP insist that the Ogoni struggle is not just about oil. It is about the rights of the Ogoni people as a distinct
ethnic group within Nigeria whose resources have been plundered by the government and Shell overtime. It is about the
Ogoni people who have made significant contributions to national budge, a people whoe oil revenue is been shared among
the majority ethnic groups in Nigeria and nothing goes back to the people.
MOSOP insists that the rights of the Ogoni people as Nigerians must be respected and we must function within Nigeria as
Ogoni people. This must begin with the creation of an Ogoni state that guarantees that a fair portion of our resources
must be used for Ogoni development.
Government on the other hand is earnestly attempting to trivialize the Ogoni issue and reduce it to the environmental
question playing down on the demand for political rights to self determination which guarantees our dignity as
Nigerians.. This has only always ridiculed the human rights records of the Nigerian government and prolonged the
conflict.
Nigeria must face the realities about the Ogoni situation and understand that the continuous denigration of political,
economic and environmental rights of the Ogoni people with an attempt to sponsor discordant voices through the oil
industry operators has only aggravated the problem and moved us miles away from whatever progress had been achieved
towards a peaceful settlement.
The Ogoni cleanup report by the UNEP had offered a window for dialogue. The government, if truly concerned about
progress and development of Ogoni should have used this opportunity to open discussions on the issues of political and
economic rights. But unfortunately, there had been more lies than truth coming from official government circles.
On the other hand is a campaign of calumny targeted at MOSOP the only credible and legitimate representation of the
Ogoni people. The oil industry knows that MOSOP remains the only voice of the Ogoni people with a history and knowledge
about the Ogoni persecutions and clear documentation on the Ogoni struggle and demands. MOSOP remains the hope of the
Ogoni people and for the government and the oil industry MOSOP's obstinacy need to broken through the sponsorship of
local actors and groups.
While the government and the oil industry continues to disregard the call for a dialogue, Shell alone has spent on image
building, over 50million dollars which should have gone a long way in building the confidence of the Ogoni people in the
lazy-loaded clean-up programme being frustrated by lack of funds.
Belema oil is doing the same thing, donating loads of rice and money to buy favour from perceived key local actors. Robo
Micheal and the NPDC are not different. Very recently, MOSOP uncovered a fraudulent communication from a group
sympathetic to Robo Micheal attempting to misrepresent its position and had to disown the falsified statement.
Belema Oil and Robo Micheal are currently the principal actors sponsoring crises in Ogoniland and should be held
responsible for any breakdown of the peace currently prevailing in the area. But this is in sleek alliance with Shell,
the NPDC and a tacit endorsement and support from the Nigerian government whose military is continually deployed to
repress any resistance seeing to project the true wishes of the Ogoni people.
One behavior which characterizes the groups sponsored by these oil industry operators is that those in favour of Belema
Oil will focus their media war against Robo Micheal while those in favour of Robo Micheal are critical of the pro-Belema
group.
The Nigerian government and Shell appear not to have learnt from the past. They still probably believe in the
recommendations of Major Paul Okuntimo, the then executioner of the Ogoni people, who suggested "Wasting Operations" as
a way of securing Shell's re--entry into Ogoniland.. Okuntimo's wasting operations meant divide and rule,, causing inter
and intra-communal crises, shooting indiscriminately and killing the Ogoni people.
Unfortunately over eighteen years of democratic rule has not shown that Nigeria is willing to respect human rights and
allow peace to reign in Ogoniland. For the Ogoni, its been a costly struggle in which a generation of leaders have been
lost.. But we are more hopeful than ever before.. I repeat,we are more hopeful than ever before. Freedom is coming but
all Ogonis must remain peaceful standing for non-violence. Freedom is coming
Fegalo Nsuke is the Publicity Secretary of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP). He wrote from Port
Harcourt, Nigeria.