Nigeria and Shell Oil: 30 years on

Let us not forget the role of Shell Oil in Nigeria

March 2026

In this world of fast moving actions, invasions, civil wars and genocide, it is easy to lose sight of past concerns which still resonate today. We are reminded in the Spring edition of the Amnesty News (Issue 228) of the events which took place 30 years ago in Nigeria and the activities of the Anglo-Dutch oil giant Shell. Amnesty produced a report last year Extraction Extinction which examines in detail the problems of the extraction industries and their effects on the environment, the climate and human rights.

On p129 of the report is a brief history of Shell’s activities in Nigeria and its complicity in the murder of Ken Saro-Wiwa:

In 1956, Shell first discovered oil in commercially viable quantities in Nigeria, when the country was still under British colonial rule. Before long, Shell operated more than 1,000 wells in 90 oil fields covering an area of 31,000 km2 across the Niger Delta. During the 1990s, Shell reported that its annual profit from oil production in Nigeria averaged USD 220-240 million, some 7% of Shell’s total worldwide profits from exploration and oil production.

Within the Ogoniland region alone, Shell operated 96 wells in five oil fields and was able to produce 28,000 barrels a day. The environmental degradation caused by their operations drove protests by the Ogoni people, led by writer and activist Ken Saro-Wiwa.

In November 1993, General Sani Abacha seized power in a military coup. General Abacha banned all political activity, replaced civilian governors with military administrators, jailed and executed opponents. An Internal Security Task Force was created to “restore and maintain law and order in Ogoniland” and immediately responded to community led protests in the Niger Delta with excessive use of force and other human rights violations.

Amnesty International has documented Shell’s involvement in human rights violations in Nigeria and its close relationship with the Nigerian military. Amnesty International’s research revealed that Shell executives met regularly with top government officials during this period and discussed the government strategy for dealing with protesters in Ogoniland.

In October 1995, nine Ogoni men including Ken Saro-Wiwa were convicted and sentenced to death in relation to trumped up charges of incitement to murder. They were hanged 10 days later; their bodies dumped in an unmarked grave. Five days later, Shell launched a new USD 4 billion natural gas joint venture with the Nigerian government. The
executions of the Ogoni Nine sparked outrage around the world. [Extract from the report]

A study by Durham University discusses the role of Shell in damaging the environment.

The organisation The Movement of the Survival of the Ogoni People, MOSOP provides further details. They maintain that Shell knowingly provided encouragement and motivation to the military authorities to stop the activities of MOSOP thus contributing to the deaths. There was an international outcry following the murder of Saro-Wiwa (pictured: photo MOSOP).

There does not seem to be any reference we could find on Shell’s website to these events. A relevant policy states: “Shell strives to make a positive impact on people around the world, and this includes providing the energy people need, contributing to local economies and communities, championing inclusion and respecting human rights” [accessed 28 February 2026].

There is some evidence to show that Shell has improved its performance in this area. However, after 30 years, the fight for justice continues. Shell has never fully cleaned up the oil spills and mess they created in the area and court actions continue.

The story of Ken Saro-Wiwa is presented in this piece in Historical Nigeria.

This is a story about a powerful international company which was able to operate in a country with few controls over its activities. When threatened by local people protesting about the severe damage it was doing to the environment, it is alleged they connived with the military authorities of the time who murdered a number of the protestors including Ken Saro-Wiwa. It seems that even after the passage of 30 years and some claims that Shell Oil is behaving more responsibly, they have yet to fully clean up the mess made by their activities. There are issues both about climate, the environment and human rights bound up in the same story.

Recent posts:

#MOSOP #Nigeria #Ogoni #oil #ShellOil

Today in Labor History November 10, 1995: The Nigerian government executed playwright and environmental activist Ken Saro-Wiwa, along with eight other members of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (Mosop). Saro-Wiwa led a nonviolent movement protesting the despoiling of Ogoniland by Royal Dutch Shell. Beverly Naidoo’s 2000 novel, “The Other Side of Truth,” is based on Saro-Wiwa’s execution, as is Richard North Patterson’s 2009 novel, “Eclipse.” His execution sparked international outrage. And the Commonwealth of Nations briefly expelled Nigeria (for 3 years).

The Ogoniland flood plain, home to 20 million people and 40 different ethnic groups, is Africa's largest wetland, with one of the highest concentrations of biodiversity on the planet. Some have called the environmental destruction of this region ecocide. In the last 10 years, Nigeria has had 9,343 oil spills, and spends $758 million per year for the cleanup. 75% of these costs are borne by local communities, not the government. By comparison, the European Union has had only 10 oil spills in the past 40 years. Some estimate that over 100 million barrels’ worth of oil have been spilled in the Niger Delta between 1960 and 1997.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #KenSaroWiwa #ogoni #shell #bigoil #nigeria #repression #ecology #nonviolence #activism #environmentalism #protest #playwright #novel #books #writer #author #BlackMastodon @bookstadon

Three species of mangroves restored in Ogoni land, says HYPREP coordinator

Nenibarini Zabbey, coordinator of the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP), says the project has restored three species of mangroves in Ogoni land.

TheCable

Today in Labor History November 10, 1995: The Nigerian government executed playwright and environmental activist Ken Saro-Wiwa, along with eight other members of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (Mosop). Saro-Wiwa led a nonviolent movement protesting the despoiling of Ogoniland by Royal Dutch Shell. Beverly Naidoo’s 2000 novel, “The Other Side of Truth,” is based on Saro-Wiwa’s execution, as is Richard North Patterson’s 2009 novel, “Eclipse.” His execution sparked international outrage. And the Commonwealth of Nations briefly expelled Nigeria (for 3 years).

The Ogoniland flood plain, home to 20 million people and 40 different ethnic groups, is Africa's largest wetland, with one of the highest concentrations of biodiversity on the planet. Some have called the environmental destruction of this region ecocide. In the last 10 years, Nigeria has had 9,343 oil spills, and spends $758 million per year for the cleanup. 75% of these costs are borne by local communities, not the government. By comparison, the European Union has had only 10 oil spills in the past 40 years. Some estimate that over 100 million barrels’ worth of oil have been spilled in the Niger Delta between 1960 and 1997.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #KenSaroWiwa #ogoni #shell #bigoil #nigeria #repression #deathpenalty #ecology #nonviolence #activism #environmentalism #protest #playwright #novel #books #writer #author #BlackMastadon @bookstadon

Letzte Woche haben wir mit @xrgermany eine kleine Aktion durchgeführt, zum Gedenken an die nigerianischen Klimaaktivisten des Ogoni-Volkes, die mit Shells Unterstützung hingerichtet wurden.

Das Ergebnis kann man hier sehen: https://www.instagram.com/p/CzeUqQrNt2b/

#ogoni #shell #fossilesubventionenstoppen #xr #klima

Today in Labor History November 10, 1995: The Nigerian government executed playwright and environmental activist Ken Saro-Wiwa, along with eight other members of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (Mosop). Saro-Wiwa led a nonviolent movement protesting the despoiling of Ogoniland by Royal Dutch Shell. Beverly Naidoo’s 2000 novel, “The Other Side of Truth,” is based on Saro-Wiwa’s execution, as is Richard North Patterson’s 2009 novel, “Eclipse.”

#WorkingClass #LaborHistory #KenSaroWiwa #ogoni #shell #BigOil #nigeria #repression #DeathPenalty #nonviolence #activism #environmentalism #protest #playwright #books #writer #BlackMastadon @bookstadon

Banner gegen Shell im Hauptbahnhof und auf dem Marie-Elisabeth-Lüders-Steg entrollt

10. November 2023. Berlin. Zum 28. Jahrestag der Hinrichtung der "Ogoni Nine" haben Aktivist*innen der Gruppe „Ken Saro-Wiwa Memorials“ am Morgen ein Transparent im Hauptbahnhof und auf dem Marie-Elisabeth-Lüders-Steg aufgehangen. Die Aktivist*innen protestierten gegen die Ausbeutung und Umweltzerstörung durch den Ölkonzern Shell im Niger-Delta.

#Ogoni9 #Ogoni #OgoniPeopleNotForgotten #ShellMustPay

1/2

6/n

Der #Ökozid, der sich in #Nigeria abspielt, nimmt kein Ende. Das Delta gilt mittlerweile als schlimmster Ökozid-Hotspot weltweit:
Umwelt verwüstet,
Lebensgrundlagen vernichtet,
Gesundheit zerrüttet!

Es fehlen Trinkwasser, Schulen, Elektrizität, Gesundheitsversorgung etc.

Das kleine #Ogoni -Land ist ein der wichtigsten Erdölzentren Nigerias. Auf einer Fläche von mehr als 1.000 km2 leben ca. 500.000 Menschen, überwiegend Fischer*innen und Bauer*innen.

#CleanUpNigerDelataNow

Während wir in Deutschland unsere Autos an Shell-Tankstellen auffüllen, vernichtet Shell in Nigeria die Umwelt und Menschenleben.

Deswegen startet am 06.11. die Ogoni-Gedenkwoche mit vielen Aktionen und Veranstaltung rund um Ken Saro-Wiwa und die Verbrechen von Shell im Niger-Delta.

Weitere Informationen hier:
https://extinctionrebellion.de/veranstaltungen/berlin/ken-saro-wiwa-memorial/9576/

@xrgermany
#ogoni #umwelt #klimawandel #shell #fossileenergien

🔥 KEN SARO-WIWA MEMORIAL 🔥

Extinction Rebellion Deutschland