AN Enugu State High Court has ordered the British government to pay a total of £420 million in compensation to the families of 21 Nigerian coal miners who were killed by colonial authorities during a workers’ protest in 1949.
News Point Nigeria reports that the court ruled that each family is entitled to £20 million as compensation for what it described as an unlawful and extrajudicial killing that violated the victims’ fundamental right to life.
Justice Anthony Onovo, who delivered the judgment on Thursday, held that the massacre of the miners at the Iva Valley coal mine in Enugu was unjustifiable and that the British government must be held accountable for the actions of its colonial administration.
The suit was instituted by Greg Onoh, a human rights activist, who sought a declaration of liability against the British government, a formal public apology, and comprehensive reparations for the victims’ families.
The respondents in the suit include the Secretary of State for the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, the British Government, the Federal Government of Nigeria, the Attorney-General of the Federation, the Head of the Commonwealth, and the Government of the United Kingdom.
However, no legal representation appeared in court for the first, second, fifth and sixth respondents, all linked to the British government.
In his ruling, Justice Onovo held that the killings constituted a gross abuse of power by colonial authorities and amounted to an extrajudicial execution of unarmed civilians.
“These defenceless coal miners were asking for improved working conditions; they were not embarking on any violent action against the authorities, yet they were shot and killed,” the judge said.
He ordered the British government to issue a formal apology to the families of the victims through their legal representatives and to publish the apology in both Nigerian and United Kingdom newspapers.
“The 1st, 2nd, 5th and 6th respondents shall pay the sum of £20 million per victim, totalling £420 million, payable by the British Government as an effective remedy and compensation for the violation of the right to life,” the court ruled.
Justice Onovo further directed that the compensation should attract post-judgment interest at the rate of 10 per cent per annum until fully paid, while dismissing claims for pre-judgment interest and exemplary damages.
The judge also ordered the Federal Government of Nigeria to initiate and pursue diplomatic engagement with the British government within 60 days to ensure the enforcement of the judgment and the payment of reparations to the affected families.
The tragic incident dates back to November 18, 1949, when workers at the Iva Valley coal mine embarked on a strike to protest unpaid wages, harsh working conditions, and poor treatment under the British colonial administration.
At the time, coal mining was a major source of energy and revenue for the colonial government in Nigeria.
Following the strike, colonial authorities ordered the closure of mining operations at Iva Valley, a directive the miners resisted, insisting on negotiations.
Amid rising tension, the then police chief, F.S. Philip, allegedly ordered security forces to open fire on the striking workers, killing at least 21 miners and injuring several others.
The incident, widely known as the Iva Valley Massacre, remains one of the most brutal episodes of colonial repression in Nigeria’s history.
The victims were:
1 – Sunday Anyasodo
2 – Ani Oha
3 – Andrew J. Obiekwe Okonkwo
4 – Augustine Chiwetalu
5 – Onoh Ugwu
6 – Ngwu Offor
7 – Ndunguba Eze
8 – Okafor Agu
9 – Livinus Ukachunwa
10 – Jonathan Agu Ozoani
11 – Moses Ikegbu Okoloha
12 – Chukwu Ugwu
13 – Thomas Chukwu
14 – Simon Nwachukwu
15 – Agu Alo
16 – Ogbonnia Ani Chima
17 – Nnaji Nwachukwu
18 – William Nwaku
19 – James Onoh Ekeowa
20 – Felix Nnaji
21 – Ani Nwaekwe

