Kenya unveils memorial to those tortured during British rule

Published September 13, 2015
Nairobi: Secretary General of the Mau Mau War Veterans Association Gitu Wa Kahengeri (left) and British High Commissioner to Kenya Christian Turner attend the unveiling of a memorial dedicated to the thousands killed, tortured and jailed in the Mau Mau rebellion against British rule in Kenya during the 1950s.—AFP
Nairobi: Secretary General of the Mau Mau War Veterans Association Gitu Wa Kahengeri (left) and British High Commissioner to Kenya Christian Turner attend the unveiling of a memorial dedicated to the thousands killed, tortured and jailed in the Mau Mau rebellion against British rule in Kenya during the 1950s.—AFP

NAIROBI: Thousands of Kenyans attended the inauguration on Saturday of a monument that pays tribute to the victims of torture and ill-treatment during the emergency period of British rule.

The memorial, backed by Britain, was officially opened in a ceremony witnessed by many veterans of the “Mau Mau” rebellion, which hastened the end of colonial rule in the East African country.

Several thousand now-elderly Kenyans say they were beaten and sexually assaulted by officers acting for the British administration trying to suppress the Mau Mau rebellion, when groups of Kenyans attacked British officials and white farmers who occupied fertile lands.

The British High Commission said in a statement that the memorial was built as part of an out-of-court agreement reached between the British government and some Mau Mau veterans in 2013. The agreement, which included more than 5,200 claimants, was worth nearly 20 million pounds.

The memorial features a statue of an armed rebel receiving a bag of supplies from a woman. It “stands as a symbol of reconciliation” between the British government and all the victims of the emergency period, which lasted from 1952 to 1960, the statement from the British High Commission said.

“This memorial is about reconciliation, allowing us to discuss together the issues arising from a difficult period in our shared history, and to move forward together,” said British High Commissioner Christian Turner. Kenya gained independence in 1963.

Published in Dawn, September 13th, 2015

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