The Daily Telegraph

Kenyan tribes call on Duke to secure tea plantation reparation­s

- By Hannah Furness ROYAL CORRESPOND­ENT

KENYAN tribes have written to the Duke of Cambridge calling for his help in securing reparation­s and an apology from Britain after their ancestral lands were turned into tea plantation­s in the colonial era.

Members of the Kipsigis and Talai tribes have petitioned the Duke to “do the right thing” and intervene in the ongoing dispute, reminding him that the country is a “special place for you and your family”.

They reminded Prince William that he proposed to Kate Middleton in Kenya and it was where the Queen learnt she had acceded to the throne. They argued they were suffering ongoing hardship owing to “losing such precious land to profit-hungry corporatio­ns”. Claiming their “colonial past” was also the Duke’s, they said: “Where we inherited the pain, you inherited the profit.”

Legal representa­tives of the surviving tribes are currently in London to meet MPS, and posed with their letter to the Duke outside Clarence House, home of the Prince of Wales. The Duke has not yet responded directly to the petition. It is understood that the letter has been forwarded to the Foreign Office, as it concerns a matter of foreign policy.

It is the latest in a series of attempts by some Commonweal­th countries to enlist the support of the Royal family in their appeals for reparation­s for slavery. This time, the Kenyan tribes claim the British government has “refused to acknowledg­e” the “immense suffering” and declined to meet them “let alone apologise”. The petition comes a year after six UN special rapporteur­s wrote to the Government expressing concern for the UK’S failure to provide reparation­s to the Kipsigis and Talai people of Kericho County in Kenya.

A UN report found that the British Government forcefully removed them from their land from the 1920s and created lucrative tea plantation­s for private companies supplying the West. Pleading for the Duke’s help, the letter, sent by representa­tives of 100,000 Kenyans, said: “The pain of our colonial past has been inherited in many forms and is exacerbate­d by the ongoing economic hardships of losing such precious land to profit-hungry corporatio­ns. We are asking that you therefore do the right thing and support our quest for justice. A spokesman for the tribes said they were “forcefully moved to an extremely arid part of Kenya” and, even after independen­ce in 1964, had to live as “squatters alongside the tea plantation­s”.

A spokesman for the FCDO said: “In 2013, the UK Government recognised that Kenyans were subject to ill treatment at the hands of the colonial administra­tion.

“We regret that these historic abuses took place, and that they marred Kenya’s progress towards independen­ce. Promoting and protecting human rights around the world remains a cornerston­e of our foreign policy.”

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