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Friday 10 May 2013

BBC documentary kenya white terror

Kenyan demonstrators
Fifty years on, and Kenyan anger is boiling over



John McGhie

Kenyan Mau Mau veterans' groups are cataloguing a potentially damaging dossier on alleged human rights abuses in the 1950s.
Suspects being checked for the mark of the Mau Mau
Suspects would be checked for the mark of the Mau Mau
This could lead to a huge legal action for compensation against the UK Government. BBC Two's Correspondent programme reveals some of the new evidence that lies behind the veterans' claims.


The Mau Mau uprising in Kenya in the 1950s was a murky part of the British military's past.
Terence Gavaghan
Terence Gavaghan denies allegations
The ruthless, clandestine Mau Mau movement found its roots in the Kenyan Kikuyu tribe.
Their aim was to win back their land and personal freedoms denied them by the British colonial power at the time.
Lawyers, working with Kenyan Mau Mau veterans' groups, have taken over 6,000 depositions alleging numerous major human rights abuses, including rape, torture, indiscriminate killing and theft of property.

Professor Caroline Elkins
Prof Caroline Elkins - the figure of 50,000 deaths is a conservative estimate
Mwangi Kanyari is one of the Mau Mau veterans - he feels bitterly aggrieved. He gave six years of loyal service in the Kings African Rifles and was wounded in action.
After retiring from the regiment in 1946, he was left with nothing. It was then he joined the Mau Mau.
New evidence has been unearthed alleging British atrocities, on such a scale that it will require the rewriting of British imperial history.


Professor Caroline Elkins of Harvard University has been investigating the claims. She says that in excess of 50,000 people could have been killed by British security forces. A significantly higher figure than was previously admitted.
Mwangi Kanyari
Mwangi Kanyari reflects the thousands now looking for justice
Human rights abused
The Correspondent programme reports a number of human rights abuses:

  • Horrific tortures and murders committed by white officials and local soldiers under their command
  • Castration and blinding for defying captors
  • Fatal whipping
  • Rape by British soldiers
There were also tales of daily killings at a British-run slave labour camp called Embakasi. It was here that Mau Mau convicts were made to build the foundations for what is now Kenya's main airport.
These stories are typical of a widespread and systematic attack by British forces against the Kikuyu people who were sympathetic to the Mau Mau campaign.
Denial
The Correspondent programme has interviewed a former colonial official, Terence Gavaghan, living in London.


He was ordered, at the time, to implement a system to unblock the Mwea camps of the 20,000 "hard-core" Mau Mau who refused to confess their oaths. This allowed for the open beating of detainees.
Secret documents obtained by Correspondent show that both the Colonial Administration and the British Government knew about - and sanctioned - the regime.
Mr Gavaghan categorically denies that he personally knocked anyone unconscious or saw anyone else being knocked out.
There is no suggestion that Mr Gavaghan is connected with any of the other alleged abuses.
Shame
John Nottingham was a district colonial officer during the time and has stayed on in Kenya after the emergency.

John Nottingham
John Nottingham is concerned that compensation is paid now

He said that compensation should be paid to victims now. They are mostly in their 80s and would soon die. He told Correspondent: "What went on in the Kenya camps and villages was brutal, savage torture.
"It is time that the mockery of justice that was perpetrated in this country at that time, should be, must be righted.
"I feel ashamed to have come from a Britain that did what it did here."
The revelations go far beyond what was known at the time.
They go a long way to proving the suspicions of anti-colonial campaigners, like the late Labour MP, Baroness Barbara Castle, that there were massive abuses taking place.
She and others revealed several individual scandals by British security forces during the 1950s.
Despite this, the then Conservative Government, headed by Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, consistently denied systematic abuse.
Past returns to haunt
But the legacy of this bloody struggle against large sections of the Kenyan people is returning with a vengeance.
Mau Mau veterans have now delivered the first part of their dossier cataloguing the abuses to the British High Commission in Nairobi.
The new evidence that Correspondent details in their programme "Kenya: White Terror" coincides with the 50th anniversary of the declaration of the state of emergency in Kenya.
Kenya: White Terror, Sunday 17 November 2002 on BBC Two at 1915 GMT
Reporter: John McGhie
Producer: Giselle Portenier
Editor: Karen O'Connor
Deputy Editor: David Belton

Online Producer: Andrew Jeffrey

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