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Decades Of Oil Spills, Decades Of Injustice

With the recent oil spills in the past months in the Trans-Niger Pipeline in B-Dere and in Yorya Oilwell, Kpean in the Niger Delta, the crisis deepens for the Ogoni people.

Decades after the execution of Ken Saro-Wiwa, justice remains denied. A pardon cannot replace accountability. Cleanup and reparations remain inadequate as communities endure toxic waters, ruined livelihoods, and displacement.

Let us again understand why Ogoni defenders’ demand for real rehabilitation, corporate accountability, and environmental justice is part of all Indigenous Peoples 'fight against imperialist plunder and right to self-determination.

Escalating Crisis in Ogoniland, Niger Delta

The situation in the Ogoniland, Niger Delta has sharply deteriorated this 2025 to 2026 following multiple oil spills and renewed government moves to resume oil extraction despite unresolved environmental devastation and Indigenous Peoples rights violations.

Recent major spills, includes:

• The May 6, 2025 Trans-Niger Pipeline oil spill in B-Dere,

• The August–December 2025 leaks from Yorla Well 14 in Kpean,

• Both have caused widespread destruction of mangroves, farmlands, and water sources,

• Communities report displacement, loss of livelihoods, contaminated drinking water, rising illnesses, and even deaths

Despite official investigations confirming causes such as corrosion and equipment failure, there has been no meaningful cleanup, remediation, or compensation months after the incidents.

Government response has largely focused on inspections, promises, and security assessments, including a high-level visit led by the National Security Adviser. However, follow-up reports confirm that pollution has worsened, with oil continuing to spread and no visible remediation on the ground.

At the same time, the administration of Nigerian President Bola Tinubu is advancing reforms to centralize oil revenues and actively exploring the resumption of oil production in Ogoniland.

Mediation efforts involving government actors and companies aim to secure community consent, while officials publicly commend “peace” and “cooperation” in the region.

These moves have deepened divisions. Many Ogoni leaders and civil society groups firmly oppose any restart of oil operations without first fulfilling long-standing demands rooted in the Ogoni Bill of Rights or the full environmental cleanup, decommissioning of aging infrastructure, adequate compensation, and justice for affected communities.

Field investigations by environmental groups reveal a landscape where ecosystems are destroyed by crude pollution rather than natural causes. These findings expose that oil spills in Ogoniland are not past events, they are ongoing.#

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