UPDATE ON THE SITUATION INSIDE NIGERIA
Nigeria is increasingly a pariah in the international community, a
rouge state which finds company with countries such as Libya, Sudan,
Syria, Iraq, Burma and Iran. The mere mention of the country's name
evokes a typical image characterized by corruption, military
dictatorship, debt, disease and disaster. Nigeria is living
dangerously and this, even by Africa's long suffering standards,
speaks volume for a country blessed with abundant oil and gas
reserves, several solid minerals, agricultural potentials and
overflowing human capital. Three decades of military rule have
spawned the monstrous specter of unfreedom, denial of fundamental
human rights, violent subjugation and brutalisation of the psyche and
spirit of the overwhelming majority of the population. The tragedy of
Nigeria is underlined by the facts that the country continues to live
well below her potentials; the economy is in ruins. The population is
held prisoner by the barrel of military armour that has brought the
country to its knees.
REVIEW OF AL'S ACTIVITIES IN 1996
1996 was both a trying and rewarding year for the Awareness League
and its membership. As usual AL had several brushes with security
operatives and the military membership. Two seminars/political
education workshops put together by AL, one at Engu and the second
inside the campus of the University of Nsukka, were disrupted by
plain clothes police and men of the state security service (SSS), who
claimed that they were acting on "orders from above". They said both
meeting were illegal and were designed to sabotage the transition to
civil rule program of the junta. They confiscated materials meant for
the workshops, but made no arrests.
In response to the strike action embarked upon by lectures in all
of Nigeria's Universities, the authorities initiated massive
clampdown on the teachers and other activists known to sympathize
with the lecturers. Hundreds were arrested and detained, while the
umbrella union of the teachers, the Academic Staff Union of
Universities (ASUU) was proscribed by military decree. Two lecturers,
who are AL members were detained in the course of the general
clampdown for a period of three months. They are: Comrade Ahmed
Ojefia of the University of Uyo and Comrade Rex Denedo of the
University of Jos. Interestingly, their incarceration has done little
to dampen their faith and commitment to the struggle for a just and
better society.
On July 26, 1996, AL in conjunction with three other left groups
organised a peaceful protest in Ibadan, about 150 kilometers
Southwest of Lagos to press the junta to release all activists and
journalists, incarcerated since Abacha seized power in November 1993,
especially those jailed on trumped-up charges of coup-plotting. A
follow-up week long anti-military enlightenment and education
workshop slated for the second week of August, 1996 was called off as
a result of a massive clampdown that followed a planned nationwide
strike by some oil workers unions, We later held our annual
conference on October 29, 1996. The congress was attended by about 65
delegates.
The intensified repressive tendencies of successive military
regimes have dictated a reassessment of tactics and strategies on the
part of AL, without necessarily losing focus of the wider Libertarian
objectives. To this end, AL in 1996 undertook a new initiative to
establish cells and networks in select industrial establishments.
Before now, AL's activities were concentrated in the Universities,
media houses and the states' civil services. The focus of the new
drive is to make AL's presence felt in other key sectors of the
economy. So far, we have witnessed modest successes, with the
establishment of medium size networks within the ranks of junior bank
workers in Engu, Jos, Owerri, Benin Asaba etc. As well as among the
radical wing of oil workers in Warri, Calabar and Port-Harcourt in
the oil devastated Niger Delta Region.
The implication of this development are immediately obvious: AL
can directly perticipate in major oil and bank workers strike actions
henceforth, in addition to the opportunity to enlarge its membership
and bolster awareness about anarcho-syndicalism within the ranks of
Nigerian workers.
(...)
AL'S ADMISSION INTO IWA
The IWA secretariat in Madrid, Spain, via a letter dated 17th
December, 1996, informed us that the XXth Congress of the IWA-AIT has
admitted AL as the Nigerian section of IWA. We welcome our formal
admission into the IWA fold, even though we have for sometime now
been a part and parcel of the IWA family.
We would have loved to be there physically to witness the
proceedings of the Congress but our efforts were thwarted by our
inability to obtain the necessary Visa documentation. Our admission
comes against the backdrop of on-going efforts to build a viable
organization, and to propagate the concepts of libertarian socialism
to an African audience. The task is, by no means, an easy one. AL
will continue to count on the active support and encouragement of the
IWA secretariat to be able to execute its programs.
--------
Note: A book by the Awareness League, "History of Anarchism in
Africa", is being published these days. We will send you more
information about this later.Last year, WSA launched a campaign to
buy a computer and other office equipment for our Nigerian comrades.
Send your contributions to:
Workers Solidarity Alliance
339 Lafayette St. - Room 202
New York,
NY 10012,
\USA
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Workers Solidarity Alliance/IWA
- Neither East Nor West -
Libertarian Book Club -> http://www.dorsai.org/~agony
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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