| Taken from
the front page of The Observer, 19/11/95. The brother of executed Nigerian activist
Ken Saro-Wiwa has accused Shell of attempting to trade
with his brother's freedom during secret meetings in
Lagos.
The Observer has learnt that Brian
Anderson, head of Shell Nigeria, offered last summer to
use the oil giant's influence with Nigeria's military
regilne to try to win freedom for Saro-Wiwa - if leaders
in Ogoniland called off global protests against Shell.
The dramatic accusations were made
this weekend by Dr Owens Wiwa, younger brother of
Saro-Wiwa who escaped from Nigeria last Thursday after a
year on the run from General Sani Abacha's govern- ment.
The Observer spoke to Dr Wiwa from a safe house in
another West African country.
Shell confirmed that the meetings
took place but refused to comment on them.
Saro-Wiwa and eight other Ogoni
activists were executed nine days ago. Ogoni sources say
the activists were starved for the three days before the
killings. Dr Wiwa confirmed they had been deprived of
food, water and bedding.
The revelation comes at a tirne of
maximum embarrassment for Shell as international fury
builds over its plans to extend operations in Nigeria.
Shell decided last week to go ahead with a £2.6 billion
gas plant in the Niger delta.
Yesterday President Nelson Mandela
warned that South Africa would impose sanctions on the
company if the deal with the pariah regime went ahead. In
Britain dozens of Shell petrol stations were hit by
protests organised by Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth
and the Body Shop.
Dr Wiwa told the Observer that
Shell's conditional offer of help had been made at three
secret meetings he held in Lagos with Mr Anderson,
between May and July last year.
'Each time, I asked him to help to
get my brother and the others out. He said he would be
able to help us get Ken freed if we stopped the protest
campaign abroad.
'I was very shocked. Even if I had
wanted to, I didn't have the power to control the
international environmental protests'
Dr Wiwa said the meetings, the
first of which was organised through the British High
Commissioner in Lagos, undermined Shell's repeated claims
not to be involved in Nigerian politics.
'Shell are involved in Nigerian
politics up to their neck If they had threatened to
withdraw from Nigeria unless Ken was released, he would
have been alive today. There is no question of that.'
Dr Wiwa is seeking asylum in
Britain and is expected to fly to London in the next few
days.
Shell launched a major public
relations campaign in Britain this weekend. Full-page
advertisements in national newspapers argue that the new
gas plant would create thousands of much-needed local
jobs and that, as a multinational company, it would be
wrong for Shell to 'intervene in the political process in
Nigeria.'
A spokesman or Shell International
confirmed yesterday that Mr Anderson had held 'a number
of private meetings' with Dr Wiwa. He said the meetings
were an attempt at 'quiet diplomacy' - not an intrusion
into politics.
Dr Wiwa joined the chorus of voices
urging Shell to pull out of the natural gas project. He
said the plant, to be based at Bonny, 20 miles from the
Ogoni border, would provide a focus for violent conflict.
Dr Wiwa, 38, a medical doctor and a
senior figure in the Ogoni self-determination movement,
went into hiding in Lagos in May 1994, three weeks after
his brother was arrested. 'I was very frightened and
moved from house to house every few weeks, sometimes with
my family, sometimes on my own. I made a few trips back
to Ogoniland but it was very dangerous,' he said.
Through his army contacts, Dr Wiwa
was able to keep in contact with his brother, who was
imprisoned in a military barracks. Sounding tired end
tense, Dr Wiwa said he had also been given graphic
details of his brother's last days through army contacts.
'My friends told me that the three days before he died
were the worst of his captivity. They took all his
bedding and virtually left hils naked. Then they refused
to give him water and they beat him up.'
Robin Houston /
robin.houston@wadham.ox.ac.uk
|