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Remember Saro-Wiwa is a coalition of organisations and individuals, initiated and co-ordinated by...


PLATFORM

and includes...

African Writers Abroad
Amnesty International
Christian Aid
Diversity Art Forum
English PEN
Friends of the Earth
Greenpeace
Human Rights Watch
Index on Censorship
International PEN
Mayor of London
Minorities of Europe
Anita & Gordon Roddick
South Bank Centre
SpinWatch

Remember Saro-Wiwa is supported amongst others by the Arts Council England

and by the Ken Saro-Wiwa Foundation

For more information about our donors and how to support Remember Saro-Wiwa click here.

Remember Saro-Wiwa is a partner of Africa05

UNIQUE MEMORIAL PROJECT LAUNCHED TO COMMEMORATE KEN SARO-WIWA
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8 March - Advance: Tuesday 22 March 2005 -
PRESS RELEASE

An initiative to create a Living Memorial for the activist and writer Ken Saro-Wiwa will be launched at City Hall in London on Tuesday 22nd March, ahead of the 10th anniversary of the writer’s death (10th November 2005).

Ken Livingstone, Anita Roddick and Ken Wiwa (Ken Saro-Wiwa’s son) will be launching a ground-breaking public art initiative at a fundraising event featuring prominent writers, activists, musicians and artists, including William Boyd, Buchi Emecheta and Lynton Kwesi Johnson, who are all joining the call to ensure the memory of Ken Saro-Wiwa and the issues he fought and died for are never forgotten.


The Living Memorial will be Britain’s first deliberately mobile memorial. An international competition will invite inspiring ideas for the project. A shortlist of five proposals, selected by a panel, will be exhibited in the run-up to 10th November 2005.


Alongside the Living Memorial will be a 3-year interactive programme, which animates the whole process through talks, workshops, publications, and the website. As the Memorial moves from site to site the programme moves with it.


Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight of his colleagues were executed by the Nigerian Government on 10th November 1995 following their campaign against the devastating environmental impacts of oil companies in the Niger Delta. Now environment and human rights groups have come together with writers, artists and the Saro-Wiwa family to form Remember Saro-Wiwa in memory of his life and work [1].

Ken Wiwa said: “The issues my father fought and died for are as urgent today in the Niger Delta and around the world as they were in 1995. This exciting project to create a Living Memorial will help to focus the public mind on the non-violent solutions that my father lived and died for and serve to remind us that peace, order and good governance insist that corporations be held accountable for their actions.”

Anita Roddick said: “Ken Saro-Wiwa showed me, through his choices and his activism, what it means to have a moral compass. He encouraged innumerable people to become the agents of change themselves. He gave heart and soul to a movement crying out for justice in a forgotten corner of Africa, to which Britain owes a lot. And for once the world listened. His example inspired a new generation of activists and it is absolutely right that we remember him.”

The Living Memorial will focus attention on the ongoing reality of the struggle for social and environmental justice in lands upon which Britain depends for the natural resources that fuel its economy. It will not be a monument that only remembers the past but one that helps to shape the future.

Project curator, David A. Bailey said: “Britain's civic spaces are overwhelmingly dominated by centuries of conventional monuments to aristocracy, empire and the military: the significant contributions of people of colour are currently appallingly under-represented in our cultural landscape. The Living Memorial will help to redress this imbalance.”

Escalating violence in the Niger Delta, including the razing of villages by the Nigerian military on February 19 and the eviction of 5000 people from a shanty town outside Port Harcourt last weekend, point to the urgent need to re-focus public attention on the region.

Notes:
[1] Remember Saro-Wiwa is a coalition of organisations and individuals initiated and co-ordinated by PLATFORM, including: African Writers Abroad, Amnesty International, Christian Aid, Diversity Art Forum, English PEN, Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace, Human Rights Watch, Mayor of London, Minorities of Europe and SpinWatch. Remember Saro-Wiwa is a partner of Africa05.

Ken Wiwa, Anita Roddick and David A Bailey are available for interview by arrangement.

Contact numbers:
Main Number: 0207 357 0055

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(c)Greenpeace/Lambon
Ken Saro-Wiwa, speaking at Ogoni Day demonstration, Nigeria. The demonstration was officially called to mark the start of UNICEF's International Year of Indigenous People, but unofficially it was against the Shell oil company. Shell operates many oilfields in the Bori region and there have been many blowouts and leaks.

Remember Saro-Wiwa

(c)Tim Nunn 2004. Path to leaking oil 'Well Head 18' in Kpor, Ogoni, Nigeria. Local Witnesses reported that the oil well, which is part of Shell's reserves, had been leaking at this rate for five months. Local streams and wells for drinking water were heavily polluted with crude oil.

(c) Stakeholder Democracy Network 2004. March 5-6 2005, 5000 people were made homeless by the State government in a shanty town clearence.