Sowore Omoyele checked into the Bellevue-NYU Program for Torture Survivors in 1999 to treat the lingering effects of an unknown substance forcibly administered to him during one of his eight arrests by the Nigeria security police. Though the 1994 incident would result in health problems that still lingered five years later, Omoyele continues to describe each detention as a chance to "spread the message" and "earn converts."
The message to which Omoyele has dedicated his life is the establishment of democracy and human rights in his native country of Nigeria. Forced to witness the rape of his cousin and the murder of his half-brothers and their mother during a ransack of their village by military police when he was just ten years old, Omoyele became an outspoken voice of opposition as a college freshman and refused to be silenced. Protesting rampant corruption in the government, and the failure of the international community, including the United States, to see past the monetary interests associated with Nigeria's crude oil production, Omoyele continued to organize Nigeria's youth despite being labeled a "threat to national security" and living under constant threat to his safety.
Vowing not to leave Nigeria until some semblance of democracy existed, Omoyele eventually departed in 1999 to seek medical treatment, following the election of President Abunsanjo. However, he is quick to emphasize that basic needs such as health care and running water continue to elude the Nigerian people, and that corruption amongst government officials, especially concerning relationships with large oil companies, persists despite the change in regime. Omoyele intends to return to Nigeria to continue the battle at home when he feels he has reached the level of education and action he came to achieve in the West. "If you want justice," he asserts, "you have to fight for it."