Ken
Wiwa
Kenule
"Ken" Bornale Tsaro-Wiwa[1] (28 November 1968 – 18 October 2016), also known as Ken
Saro-Wiwa, Jr, was a Nigerian journalist and author. As of 2013, he served
as an aide to President Goodluck Jonathan as senior special assistant on civil society
and international media.
Background
Wiwa
was born in Lagos, the eldest son of Nigerian human rights activist and
author Ken Saro-Wiwa.[2] He was educated in Nigeria and at Stancliffe Hall School and Tonbridge School in England, and then at the School
of Slavonic and East European Studies, now part of University
College, London.
He was editor of the United Kingdom's Guardian′s periodical New Media Lab, where he
developed content for the paper's online edition.
Journalism
Wiwa
relocated to Canada in 1999, where he was a
writer-in-residence at Massey College in the University of Toronto, Saul Rae Fellow at the Munk
Centre for International Studies at the University of Toronto,[2] a mentor at the Trudeau Foundation[2] in Canada and a columnist for The Globe and Mail,[2] where he was twice nominated for National
Newspaper Awards for feature writing.[3]
Wiwa
addressed the European Union, Oxford Union and spoke at a number of colleges and
universities, including Harvard University, McGill University and the University of Cambridge. He served as a conference
rapporteur at a United Nations meeting on cultural
diversity. A regular commentator on major news channels including CNN, BBC, Al-Jazeera, he appeared as a guest on Hard Talk and Newsnight.
In
2005 he was selected by the World Economic Forum as a Young Global Leader.[2] He was the founding curator of the Abuja Hub
for the Globalshapers Programme of the World Economic Forum and has also served
on the Africa Advisory Council of the Prince of Wales Rainforest Project.[4] He has written for The Guardian in the UK,[2][4] and the Washington Post, The New York Times and National
Geographic,
in the United States'. He served as an editor-at-large for Arise Magazine
and contributed occasional columns for magazines, newspapers and blogs.
Wiwa
produced and narrated television and radio documentaries for the BBC and CBC,[2][4] and wrote commentaries for National Public Radio. His memoir of his father,
In the Shadow of a Saint, won the 2002 Hurston-Wright Nonfiction Award.[4]
Special Assistant
In
2005 he returned to Nigeria, and the following year former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo appointed Wiwa as his special assistant on
peace, conflict resolution and reconciliation. He served President Umaru Yar'Adua as special assistant on international
affairs.
Death
References
· "Ken Wiwa". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 19 October
2016.
· · Geoffrey York, "Nigerian author, political activist Ken Wiwa
dies", The
Globe and Mail, 19 October 2016.
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