THE
Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People has said it will not
approach the Federal Government for a presidential pardon for late
environmentalist and activist, Ken Saro-Wiwa, and eight others who were
hanged by the Gen. Sani Abacha military regime.
MOSOP stated that since Saro-Wiwa and eight of their kinsmen did not
commit the offence for which they were killed, it would be inappropriate
for them to ask government to grant them (Ogoni Nine) amnesty.
Saro-Wiwa and eight other Ogoni activists were hanged on November 10,
1995, on the orders of a tribunal set up by the then military regime.
Media Adviser to MOSOP President, Mr. Bariala Kpalap, explained that
rather than approach government for pardon, the body had taken steps to
demand that the Federal Government should invalidate the ruling of the
tribunal that sentenced Saro-Wiwa and eight others to death.
Kpalap, who spoke in a telephone interview on Friday with SUNDAY PUNCH, insisted that the President Goodluck Jonathan-led government must clear the names of the ‘Ogoni Nine.’
Kpalap said, “The fact is that Ogoni people through MOSOP have been
asking for the names of Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight others to be cleared.
“The truth is that if people who were rightly convicted of corruption
could be granted presidential pardon, why would the names of those who
were wrongfully hanged not be cleared?”
Similarly, the Ogoni Solidarity Forum told SUNDAY PUNCH in
an interview that it was not necessary for the people of Ogoni to ask
the Federal Government to pardon Saro-Wiwa and eight others.
National Coordinator of the forum, Mr. Celestine Akpobari, described
the presidential pardon granted to former Bayelsa State Governor, Mr.
Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, and others as an attempt to take Nigeria back
to the bad book of Transparency International.
“If such people could be pardoned by the President, Ken Saro-Wiwa and
eight other Ogoni indigenes that were murdered should at least be on
the first list of those to benefit from such gesture.
“Look at the set of people they gave national award. Today, corrupt
people worship with Jonathan every Sunday in Aso Rock. But the point is
that we are not asking for pardon for Saro-Wiwa; we are asking the
Federal Government to quash the judgment against them,” Akpobari
stressed.
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