Sunday, December 28, 2025

THE FORGOTTEN WARRIORS OF THE CREEKS: HOW IJAW “GENERALS” ABANDONED THE OKAH BROTHERS AND THEIR COMRADES IN THE FIGHT FOR NIGER DELTA JUSTICE

In the oil-soaked swamps of Nigeria’s Niger Delta, where multinational corporations pump billions from polluted lands while host communities drink poison and breathe gas, the story of the Okah brothers stands as a brutal symbol of betrayal, selective memory, and the corrupting seduction of power. Henry and Charles Okah once central figures in the militant struggle that shook the Nigerian state now rot in distant prisons, abandoned by the very Ijaw “generals” who once shared their trenches, rhetoric, and risks. This is not sentiment. This is an indictment.

Henry Okah, widely regarded as a key figure in the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), has been locked away in South Africa since his conviction over the 2010 Abuja Independence Day bombings. He is serving a long sentence in a maximum-security facility under harsh conditions, far from home, family, and the creeks that defined his struggle. His supporters insist his prosecution was political, arguing that he was criminalised for confronting the oil-state alliance that has bled the Niger Delta dry for decades. Whether hero or villain, one fact is undeniable: he has been completely abandoned by the Niger Delta power brokers who once benefited from the same struggle he refused to renounce.

His elder brother, Dr. Charles Okah, remains imprisoned in Nigeria under even more disturbing circumstances. Convicted and sentenced to life, he has endured prolonged solitary confinement, deteriorating health, and repeated allegations of abuse and retaliation for speaking out against prison corruption. Reports of his critical health episodes have come and gone with barely a whisper from the Niger Delta political elite. No rallies. No pressure. No outrage. Silence.

And they are not alone. Other Ijaw fighters linked to the same struggle men branded militants, rebels, or terrorists depending on who is speaking remain forgotten in Nigeria’s prison system. These were not career criminals. They were products of a region pushed to desperation by environmental devastation, economic exclusion, and state violence. They took up arms while others issued press statements. Today, those others sit at the table of power.

The contrast is obscene. Former militant leaders who accepted the 2009 amnesty reinvented themselves overnight. Pipelines once blown up are now “secured” under billion-naira contracts. Men who declared war on the Nigerian state now pose for photographs with presidents and generals. They are celebrated as stakeholders, elders, even patriots. Yet not one has mounted a serious, sustained campaign for the release or fair treatment of the Okah brothers. Not one has risked political capital to speak their names loudly where it matters.

This is the part many fear to say plainly: the Okahs were discarded because they refused to sell out. They rejected an amnesty they believed addressed symptoms, not causes. They refused to trade struggle for stipends. In doing so, they became inconvenient reminders of a revolution that was supposed to change everything but instead produced a new elite guarding the same old system.

The Niger Delta struggle once forced Nigeria and the world to pay attention. Oil production collapsed, negotiations followed, and fear entered the corridors of power. Today, the creeks are quiet, but nothing fundamental has changed. Pollution remains. Poverty persists. Youth unemployment festers. What changed is who benefits. The silence around the Okahs exposes how far the struggle has drifted from its original soul.

This is a direct challenge to conscience and authority. The Nigerian state has pardoned and rehabilitated many who wielded violence when it suited political interests. The power of mercy exists. The power of influence exists. If former militant leaders can secure contracts and access, they can demand justice or at least humanity for those left behind. Anything less is complicity.

To the military leadership, to commanders who know the history of the creeks and the cost of renewed unrest: speak up. To President Bola Tinubu, who holds constitutional powers of mercy and understands political bargaining: history is watching. The continued abandonment of the Okah brothers is not just a personal tragedy; it is proof that the Niger Delta struggle has been hijacked.
You cannot celebrate the fruits of rebellion and condemn the roots. You cannot dine with power and deny the prisoners who paid the price. Free the forgotten warriors or admit that the revolution ended the day contracts began.

AYAKOROMO, WHERE TRADITION MEETS TOMORROW - GRAND 40th ANNUAL CONVENTION /CULTURAL ODYSSEY: A Jubilee of Heritage, Unity and Celebration

Along the languid bends of the Niger Delta, where the gentle tide kisses the shores with whispers of history, the Ayakoromo community in Burutu Local Government Area is standing on the threshold of a momentous occasion – its fortieth annual convention As the dawn of 29th December 2025 approaches, the air is already thick with anticipation, shimmering with the promise of culture, camaraderie, and pure celebration. This is not merely an event; it is an unfolding chapter in a story four decades in the telling – a vibrant tapestry of tradition and unity.  

From the very first day, guests will be welcomed into a carnival of delights, beginning with warm arrivals at 10 o’clock, before the rhythm of ancestral drums unleashes a traditional dance at noon. As the sun dips gently westward, football matches will rouse competitive spirits at four, energising both participants and spectators alike. One can almost hear the laughter and chants echoing across the fields, drawing hearts closer together.  
The following morning, 30th December, the community’s pulse will quicken with the Ogele Dance at 8am – an age-old spectacle in which movements become poetry and bodies speak without words. An enlightening paper presentation at 10 o’clock will feed the mind, laying pathways for thought and progress, before the midday review of the constitution rekindles the community’s commitment to its shared vision. And then, with the turn of the clock to one, a lively debate and resolution session will invite spirited exchange, proof that the essence of Ayakoromo lies not only in festivity but also in the wisdom of discourse.  

New Year’s Eve, the grand finale on 31st December, will be a crescendo of tradition and protocol – with final constitutional reviews, debates, and resolutions that promise to leave a lasting imprint on the community’s governance and future direction. Yet amid the formalities, the soul of the celebration will never be far – the sound of drums, the flash of ceremonial masquerades, the jovial roar of live music from JFred Best May, all interwoven into a feast for the senses.  
Indeed, the convention will be a kaleidoscopic panorama of competitions and performances. The much-loved Quarter to Quarter Dance Competition will see contestants unleash their finest moves in a spirited contest, with prizes that will glisten as sweet rewards. The famed Tompolo Dance Steps will ripple through the crowds, reawakening memories and forging new ones. Even the Drinking Competition shall pour forth laughter along with the beverages – a jovial nod to the humour and warmth that shape Ayakoromo’s social heartbeat.  

Honoured dignitaries will grace the celebration: -- the distinguished Hon. Dr Braduce Angozi, the charismatic Hon. Julius Pondi, the formidable High Chief Kestin Pondi (Managing Director of Tantita Security Services Nigeria Limited), and Hon. Julius Takeme,  chairman of Burutu Local Government, among other eminent personalities, traditional rulers, and guardians of the community’s legacy. Their presence will lend ceremonial gravitas to an already historic occasion.  
In the midst of festivity, wisdom will also take its rightful place. TANTITA Security Services Nigeria Limited will present a keynote address on pressing security issues,  offering timely insights and safeguarding the peace that Ayakoromo holds dear. This fusion of celebration and contemplation will serve as a testament to the community’s balanced spirit – joyous yet responsible, vibrant yet vigilant.  

It is said that some gatherings are like the tides – they come in, leave their mark, and retreat into memory – yet Ayakoromo’s 40th annual convention promises to be a tide that refuses to ebb, carving its presence into the hearts of all who attend. Under the Delta sun and to the music of the land, a people will rise together, rejoice together, and look towards the horizon together.  

In truth, this is an event not merely to be observed, but to be lived. The general public is warmly invited to step into this living celebration – to taste its flavours, to feel its rhythms, and to carry home the echo of a community that has danced, wrestled, sung, and built together for forty glorious years. 
EBIKABOWEI KEDIKUMO - writes from Ayakoromo Town, Delta State