Apologies and Fair Compensations to the Tortured Mau Mau
Apologies and Fair Compensations to the Tortured Mau Mau
Colonialism Reparation calls on the
United Kingdom to immediately apologize and pay fair
compensations to the Mau Mau for the torture and abuse
systematically carried out by the British colonial
government during the brutal repression of the independence
movement in Kenya.On June 6, 2013 the British
Foreign Secretary William Hague announced the Parliament
that the Government had reached an agreement with the Kenyan
citizens which had denounced it for the torture and abuse
suffered during the brutal repression of the
independence movement in Kenya by the British colonial
government in the fifties and early sixties of the last
century. The British Government has recognized that "Kenyans
have been subject to torture and other forms of
ill-treatment at the hands of the colonial administration",
it has expressed its "sincere regret" and has agreed
compensations for 2,600 pounds (about 3,000 euro) for each
of the 5,228 applicants.
Fine modulo
It is evident that
the British Government has accepted the agreement, after
opposing for four years and loosing twice in front of the
High Court in London, forced by the circumstances and
only to minimize the damage. The recognition that "Kenyans
have been subject of torture and other forms of
ill-treatment at the hands of the colonial administration"
requires an in-depth investigation and the punishment of
persons guilty of these crimes, the "sincere regret"
expressed must convert into sincere apologies and the
compensation of 2,600 pounds must become a fair and
guaranteed compensation to all
the tortured Mau Mau. To this end, it is certainly
useful to recall that in the years immediately following the
abolition of slavery the
former slave-owners received compensations for 40,000
pounds at current value for each slave freed (about 57,000
euros).
Colonialism Reparation calls on the
United Kingdom to immediately apologize and pay fair
compensations to the Mau Mau for the torture and abuse
systematically carried out by the British colonial
government during the brutal repression of the independence
movement in Kenya and calls on the British government to
publish with no delay the documents survived to the
systematic cancellation, kept for more than half a century
by the Ministry of foreign affairs in the secret archive of
Hanslope
Park.
ENDS