British to pay Kenyans tortured during colonial rule

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — The wrinkled faces of the elderly Kenyans who gathered in a downtown Nairobi hotel registered gratitude, relief and joy Thursday as Britain's high commissioner said what many waited decades to hear.,,

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NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — The wrinkled faces of the elderly Kenyans who gathered in a downtown Nairobi hotel registered gratitude, relief and joy Thursday as Britain’s high commissioner said what many waited decades to hear.

Britain said it “sincerely regrets” the acts of torture a British colonial government carried out against Kenyans fighting for liberation from colonial rule in the 1950s and 1960s. The Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London insisted that an “expression of deep regret” was not the same thing as an apology, which would have legal implications. But the victims of British abuses a half-century ago appeared satisfied, even jubilant.

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, during which groups of Kenyans attacked British officials and white farmers who had settled in some of Kenya’s most fertile lands.

In London, Foreign Secretary William Hague told the House of Commons the government recognizes that Kenyans were subject to torture and other ill treatment. Thursday’s settlement will pay about $21.5 million to the 5,200 Kenyans who were found to have been tortured, or about $4,100 per Kenyan victim. Another $9.25 million goes to pay costs to the Kenyans’ legal team.

“This success is total jubilation. We are so happy today because the truth will be told worldwide,” said Francis Mutisi, assistant secretary general of the Mau Mau War Veterans Association. Mutisi said he was detained by Britain’s colonial government for three weeks in 1960 while looking for a job.

Martyn Day, a lawyer for the Kenyans, said he hopes Hague’s statement will be “the final resolution of this legal battle that has been ongoing for so many years.”

“The elderly victims of torture now at last have the recognition and justice they have sought for many years,” Day added. “For them, the significance of this moment cannot be overemphasized.”

The simultaneous announcement in Kenya’s capital took on the air of a tribal celebration — or perhaps a joyful 50-year school reunion. Several dozen elderly Kenyans clapped hands, swayed ever so slightly and sung joyful songs of struggle during a nearly two-hour news conference attended by British High Commissioner Christian Turner.

“This era of history will remain controversial,” Turner told the elderly Kenyans. But “history teaches us you can’t have lasting peace with justice, accounting and reconciliation.”

Britain has apologized, or come close to apologies in the past.

In 2009, Prime Minister Gordon Brown offered an apology for the “inhumane” treatment of Alan Turing, the World War II codebreaker who committed suicide in 1954 after being prosecuted for homosexuality and forcibly treated with female hormones.

In 2006, then-Prime Minister Tony Blair expressed “deep sorrow” for Britain’s role in the trans-Atlantic slave trade, though some felt that fell short of a full apology. The next year he said: “I have said we’re sorry and I say it again now.”

And more recently, Prime Minister David Cameron, laid a mourning wreath at the site of a 1919 massacre of hundreds of Indians by British colonial forces during a recent visit there. He called the killings “a shameful event in British history.”

The Mau Mau victims were led by Gitu wa Kahengeri, a diminutive veteran dressed in an oversized suit jacket.

“There is no amount of compensation that can cover for those who suffered,” he said, noting that he and his father were detained for 10 years.

But he added: “The British government accepted that something bad happened, and this is what the veterans in this group have been seeking. The fact that an apology has been given is sufficient to atone for what happened.”

The payouts, though low in Western terms, can still have an impact in Kenya, where per capita income is about $1,800. Despite the payout, Britain’s government doesn’t accept liability for the actions of previous colonial governments.

Caroline Elkins, a Harvard professor who wrote “Imperial Reckoning: The Untold Story of Britain’s Gulag in Kenya,” said an acknowledgement that wrongs were committed is more important than money to the victims.

“The acknowledgment of the bitterness and the pain that they’ve been suffering for years, and the acknowledgment with a form of an apology, this has been a pre-eminent desire of theirs beyond any monetary claim,” she said. “For years when I did my research and took testimony no one asked me for anything. They just wanted the world to know what happened.”

The fight for justice may not yet be over. Atsango Chesoni, the executive director of the Kenyan Human Rights Commission, which has long been aiding the Mau Mau veterans, said her group will focus on getting the Kenyan government to atone for treatment of the Mau Mau.

“Many of the Mau Mau veterans have long-standing issues around land (rights). Many continue to live in abject poverty and squalor. We therefore hope that in the same way it was possible to have this dialogue with the British government, we will have the same dialogue with the Kenyan government,” she said.

The British settlement follows a ruling by Britain’s High Court in October that three Kenyans could pursue compensation claims. The Mau Mau payouts could set a precedent for other cases of abuse in other countries by Britain’s colonial leaders. But Elkins said she doesn’t think other cases are as strong as the Mau Mau case because of a lack of documented evidence.

The British government position is that each colonial case is unique.

For Nathan Kamothu, who arrived at the Hilton Hotel in a sharp blue suit and red tie, the settlement means that: “We’ve succeeded.”

Thinking back to his arrest in 1952, the 75-year-old with a wide but mostly toothless smile said he had been arrested, seriously beaten and his legs tied up in chains.

“There was a lot of trouble and torture brought to us by the colonial masters,” he said.

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Gregory Katz reported from London.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.

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