| The Murder Of Dikibo - Another Lesson For Niger-Delta |
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| Author: Chief Gani Fawehinmi | |
The Murder Of Dikibo - Another Lesson For Niger-DeltaBy Chief Gani Fawehinmi, LLD, SAN It appears to me that there is a deliberate but undeclared policy of the Nigerian state, through successive governments, to eliminate prominent leaders and leading lights from the Niger-Delta, be they of the left, right or centre particularly those who have the moral capacity to influence, motivate and to lead their people.
ISAAC JASPER ADAKA BOROLet us start with Isaac Jasper Adaka Boro, a revolutionary of the Niger-Delta. The Niger Delta Peoples Republic Declaration of Independence made the following declarations: 1. That a state of Emergency is hereby declared in the territory to give adequate protection to the Niger Delta people against aggressors.
3. That all oil companies were, in their own interest, to stop exploration and renew agreements with the new Republic. Defiance of the order was to result in dislocation of the Company’s Exploration and forfeiture of their right to renewal of such agreements. 4. That all aliens were to report within 24 hours to the nearest D.V.S. agent to ensure their protection. An Alien was defined as one who was not originally by birth, of the Niger Delta People Republic. 5. That all Elementary and Secondary Grammar Schools were closed until September to enable the new Republic advance a thorough and totally free Educational system for the people. 6. That all former District and Country Councils, Courts and revenue collecting organs were closed and the territory had become ‘tax free’ until fully industrialised. 7. That the Niger Delta Volunteer Service, hitherto referred to as D.V.S. had become the Law enforcing body and the standing armed force of the people. All citizens of the republic were to surrender all arms in their possession to the nearest D.V.S. agent. 8. That the Provisional Senate consisted of 84 members, six from each of the 14 clans. The Provisional Senate was to advise the Liberation Government on a new constitution for the People.The Declaration document was signed by Adaka Boro as General Officer Commanding the DVS and Leader of the Liberation Government. After Boro lost his appeal at the Supreme Court and he was kept in the prison, the Nigerian civil war broke out. He was compelled by circumstances to join the Nigerian side in the Civil War. In suspicious circumstances, which are yet to be officially explained, he met his death. That eclipsed his “revolution”. He fought and died while trying to rescue his people from socio‑economic subjugation. KENULE BEESON SARO-WIWAThen came Ken Saro Wiwa. He saw injustice and fought against it. The Nigerian State descended on him and got rid of him by hanging him and eight others to death.Ken was an intellectual, an administrator, a poet, an orator, an author, a great thinker, and above all he was an organiser of people per excellence. He had an overwhelming moral authority. He aimed to redress the political and socio-economic wrongs imposed on the Niger Delta people. His base was Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People. (MOSOP). He was tenacious and determined in pursuit of emancipatory ideals. In all his struggles, Ken applied peaceful, non-violent means reminiscent of the strategy and tactics of Mahatma Ghandi. The Nigerian State became uncomfortable with the spreading influence of the icon from Niger Delta. On Friday, November 10, 1995 Ken and 8 other equally prominent activist were hanged. Acid was poured on the dead body of Ken, perhaps to prevent (in their puerile and morbid thinking) the reincarnation of Ken Saro Wiwa. In the words of Ken at the Special Tribunal set up by the Late General Sani Abacha: “My lord, we all stand before history. I am a man of peace, of ideas. Appalled by the denigrating poverty of my people who live on a richly-endowed land, distressed by their political marginalization and economic strangulation, angered by the devastation of their land, their ultimate heritage, anxious to preserve their right to life and to a decent living and determined to usher to this country a whole a fair and just democratic system which protects everyone and every ethnic group and gives us all a valid claim to human civilization, I have devoted all my intellectual and material resources, my very life, to a cause in which I have total belief and from which I cannot be blackmailed or intimidated. I have no doubt at all about the ultimate success of my cause, no matter the trials and tribulations which I and those who believe with me may encounter on our journey. Nor imprisonment nor death can stop our ultimate victory. SENATOR OBI WALI AND PA ALFRED REWANEWe cannot but mention the murder of Senator Obi Wali, a prominent Niger Deltan of Rivers State extraction who was gruesomely assisinated in his house and matcheted to pieces. Or how can we forget the organised assassination of Pa Alfred Rewane of Niger Delta and of Warri pedigree. Pa Rewane was a national philanthropist and a die-hard defender of Niger Delta.He loathed poverty. In several advertisements in major Newspapers in Nigeria before his death, he espoused the philosophy of governance that should cater for the welfare of the country in general and the Niger Delta in particular. His influence impacted effectively on both the Niger Delta and Nigeria as a whole. The government could not accommodate his criticisms through the written word. He was assassinated on Friday, October 6, 1995. CHIEF MARSHAL HARRYMarshall Harry was murdered on Wednesday, 5th March 2003. He was a former National Vice Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) South-South, Niger Delta. He later decamped to the All Nigerian Peoples Party (ANPP). Shortly after he decamped to the (ANPP), he was assassinated in Abuja.ALFRED AMINASAORI KALA DIKIBOAlfred Aminasaori Kala Dikibo was murdered on the night of Friday, February 6, 2004. The world woke up to hear of his death on Saturday, 7th February 2004 which was a weekend. The President had his media chat on Sunday, 8th February 2004 where he declared that Dikibo was killed by armed robbers.Obviously no investigations had been carried out to justify General Obasanjo’s unnatural and diversionary conclusion. Since the President made an affirmative assertion as to the cause of Dikibo’s murder, it would be expected that the police would ask the President some questions. In fact, the investigation should start from Aso Rock, to PDP and then to Rivers State in that order. Furthermore, the agenda of the meeting which Dikibo was to attend is important if the police is to get to the root of his death. The following questions are very pertinent in this regard: (a) What was the aim of the meeting?The setting up of a panel to investigate the murder of Dikibo is, I believe, a smokescreen and it should not be accepted by the Niger Delta people. When murder is committed, politically or otherwise, it is not the duty of a tribunal of inquiry to fish out the killers. It is a function assigned by Law to the Law Enforcement agents. The panel appointed by Mr President is ostrich-like. The President had already spoken, 48 hours after the murder, when investigation had not been carried out. The President has come to a conclusion before investigation and I do not see how a panel set up by him will have the authority and moral courage to disagree with him, within the context of Nigeria. In addition to the investigations, which the Law Enforcement Agencies may be carrying out, the Niger Delta people, their leaders and their fighting organisations, should come together to conduct an independent investigation. The report of such independent probe should be made public and turned over to the police and the governors in Niger Delta for the prosecution of those involved. Unless the Niger Delta people are united against oppression and they are prepared to put their destiny in their own hands to shake off the yoke of governmental barbarism and subjugation of their future, there may be no end to the murders. In conclusion, all Nigerians, regardless of ethnic affiliation, religious differences or varying geo-political backgrounds, have a duty to rise up and resist arbitrary deprivation of lives. Arbitrary killings by the State will continue for as long as such odious criminal and despicable acts do not evoke mass anger and people’s peaceful uprising. Only the fear of a volcanic social eruption from below can stop barbaric behaviour by holders of political power. CHIEF GANI FAWEHINMI, LLD, SAN Thursday, 12th February, 2004 |


