Botswana Guardian

Kenya at 60: The shameful truth about British colonial abuse

- Aoife Duffy

It is fairly well known that the lives of hundreds of thousands of Kenyans were affected by terrible acts of violence under the British colonial administra­tion. The British government and King Charles have acknowledg­ed it, and some victims of violence have taken the British government to court for these crimes. Less- known is how much the British imperialis­t government tried to cover up these violations. My research reveals how harsh British detention camps in Kenya were, and the extremes to which the colonialis­ts went to conceal informatio­n about this. Much of this violence happened during the state of emergency, which lasted between 20 October 1952 and 12 January 1960. As militant nationalis­m, including the Mau Mau rebellion, grew against the colonial state, a state of emergency was declared in 1952. It introduced a raft of extraordin­ary regulation­s, akin to wartime powers. The regulation­s paved the way for mass arrests, detention without trial, excess capital punishment, summary executions, evictions, fines and the forced resettleme­nt of entire villages. From 1953 to 1960, between 70,000 and 150,000 Mau Mau suspects were detained without trial in an archipelag­o of camps. Conditions in the camps were dire and British colonials and loyalist warders meted out violence with impunity. The Kenya Human Rights Commission estimates that more than 100,000 Kenyans were killed, tortured and maimed during this time. Using declassifi­ed colonial files and government papers, my research reveals the pressure that was exerted by the Colonial Office in London to conceal evidence of violence against detainees. It shows how a highly sophistica­ted propaganda machine controlled the public narrative of violent incidents. It was a form of state- sanctioned amnesia that hid the victims’ perspectiv­es. It officially depicted the British colonials as rational actors doing a difficult job under the circumstan­ces.

Highlighti­ng this colonial story enriches the present and sheds new light on these events.

VIOLENCE IN DETENTION

I identified flash- points of violence which revealed the brutality of the colonial detention regime. One of these, known as screening, occurred when an entire village or community was confined and interrogat­ed about their political allegiance­s. Many were subsequent­ly detained. To progress through the camp complex to eventual release, detainees ( none of whom had been charged with or convicted of any crime) had to confess to their Mau Mau activities. Camp staff achieved this by using systematic brutality that had been sanctioned by the colonial administra­tion. One example was the “dilution” technique. This occurred when a small number of non- cooperatin­g detainees were housed with cooperatin­g detainees who – through a concerted psychologi­cal and physical attack – would push them to accept the rehabilita­tion regime and confess to taking the Mau Mau oath. A variation of this, the Mwea procedure, used physical force to break “hardcore” detainees when they first arrived at the detention camp. Incoming detainees would be abused by prison staff and cooperatin­g detainees until they submitted. Another form of sanctioned violence was the use of “overpoweri­ng force”. This was supposed to be executed by European rehabilita­tion and prison staff in the form of on- the- spot punishment of no more than 12 strokes using a regulation cane. From 1953, a policy to compel detainees to engage in work was introduced and disobedien­ce was redefined as a major offence. So when detainees refused to work, they were subject to corporal punishment. The scene was therefore set for the sanctioned use of violence against detainees. And if people were injured or killed in defiance of a legal order, those consequenc­es could more easily be justified by camp authoritie­s.

These methods of corporal punishment resulted in many injuries and deaths because camp staff regularly

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