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Ken Saro-Wiwa was a prominent Nigerian author, activist and television producer. He garnered attention by leading a nonviolent campaign against the multinational petroleum industry. That industry recklessly dumped petroleum waste in Saro-Wiwa’s home region, the Nigerian delta, which gave rise to severe environmental damage.

Saro-Wiwa was born on 10 October 1941 into a prominent Ogoni family. As a child, he demonstrated a talent for scholarship and, upon completing his secondary schooling at Government College Umuahia, he won a scholarship to read English at the University of Ibadan.

He taught briefly at the University of Lagos after graduating in 1965. But he soon left that position to pursue a bureaucratic career, and served as a federal administrator for the Bonny Island oil terminal. Nigeria experienced a civil war between 1967 and 1970, and during the conflict, Saro-Wiwa supported the government’s goal of preventing the state of Biafra from seceding. He gained an appointment as the commissioner for education in the Rivers State as a reward for his support.

He left government service in 1973 because he advocated greater autonomy for the Ogoni people. But he achieved considerable success in that decade in a variety of commercial ventures in real estate and retail. In the 1980s, though, he shifted his focus from business to television production, writing and journalism. He wrote a satirical television series, Basi & Company, which looked at looked at the lives of gang members in Lagos. The series was reportedly the most popular television series in Africa in its day. He also published books such as Sozaboy, and Forest of Flowers, and wrote a regular column for the Lagos Times. He managed to gain an audience beyond Nigeria due to his newspaper writing.

Saro-Wiwa served in one presidential administration in the late 1980s. But his service did not last for long and by the end of the decade he had come to believe that corruption was an entrenched feature of Nigeria’s successive military regimes and that that unfortunate state of affairs could not be challenged from within the existing political structure.

In 1990, he helped found the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP). He also wrote the Ogoni Bill of Rights and worked with Greenpeace International. He became the principal opposition leader in Nigeria. And MOSOP was one of the most visible groups that stood in opposition to economic exploitation of Nigeria’s oil resources, and the concomitant environmental fallout.

But his position atop the oppositional hierarchy was far from secure. MOSOP divided into competing factions. Some people within the fold advocated and resorted to violence. And some Ogoni tribal leaders believed in ongoing negotiation with international oil companies. So he found himself between people with irreconcilable approaches.

On 21 May 1994, four people who opposed Saro-Wiwa were killed in an attacked orchestrated by a group affiliated with MOSOP. Saro-Wiwa had typically decried the use of violence. But he was arrested and tried by a Nigerian military court all the same along with eight other people. The defendants were referred to as the Ogoni Nine. Saro-Wiwa was sentenced to death. And despite international protestation regarding the unfairness of the procedure, he was executed by hanging on 10 November 1995 before he could appeal his conviction.

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[-] Huldra@hexbear.net 9 points 2 years ago

Decided to watch Treasure of the Sierra Madre and from its reputation I expected a slow burn about 3 men losing trust in each other over the allure of gold.

But the actual film is mostly two literally just normal* guys trying to calm down the third guy who starts ranting under his breath about how they're planning to kill him and take all of his gold within like two weeks of them starting to mine the gold.

Literally he just keeps doing crazy shit and pointing guns at the normal guys and they just tell him that they're fine doing everything the way he says, as long as the gold is divided equally, they disarm him several times and give him his gun back after he threatens to shoot them!

One time the crazy guy starts getting mad over a joke that all 3 of the guys are hogs doing hog work, so he starts insinuating that he deserves a larger share due to him paying more for tools and supplies, so one of the regular guys goes "sure buddy, I was meaning to pay you back for fronting that cash, here you go" and hands him a bunch of gold dust that the crazy guy literally just dumps out on the ground and then says "just dont call me a hog ok?"

I would call it not great storytelling but Humphrey Bogart is great playing the most unreasonable lunatic in the world, its so fucking funny. They literally just want to split up the gold into 3 big piles of "set for life" amounts of money and he is absolutely dedicated to making sure that it will not go smoothly, no matter how much they try to appease him.

*(They do temporarily decide to murder a guy over the gold but to be fair, the guy literally marched up to their camp and said they can either shoot him right then and there, or they can let him in on the gold scheme from then on and he gets a 25% share of future profits, or he turns them in to the federales and gets 25% of everything. And I just can't hold them that accountable for deciding to murder a guy that literally tells them that unless they want to share the gold, they have to murder him, you brought up the topic first dude.)

[-] Dolores@hexbear.net 5 points 2 years ago

ic9nic movie for guys looking sweaty in prone positions on a soundstage

this post was submitted on 10 Oct 2023
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