
Listen to the Episode
Our second season focuses on the life and legacy of Ken Saro-Wiwa, a writer and one of nine non-violent Ogoni activists the General Sani Abacha military government brutally executed in 1995. The Ogoni are an ethnic group situated in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria. For years, they have suffered pollution and environmental degradation stemming from crude oil extraction on their land. Saro-Wiwa's protests against oil companies such as Shell, including his leadership of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP), frustrated the Abacha government, which relied heavily on oil exports.
Hosted by Wale Lawal.
Continuing from Part I, this episode follows Saro-Wiwa's transformation from a public intellectual into the leader of a mass movement, as the environmental destruction in Ogoniland became impossible to ignore.


