Kenyan Mau Maus in UK court bid | |||||||||
Five Kenyan independence fighters who are now in their 70s and 80s have launched a compensation claim for alleged human rights abuses under British colonial rule. The suit was filed at the high court in London on Tuesday and follows the British government's rejection of a demand for compensation and a formal apology made in 2006. Gitu wa Kahengeri, spokesman for the 7,000-member Mau Mau War Veterans Association, said: "What we are doing is for all the freedom fighters in Kenya. "We are demanding compensation because we were in concentration camps for 10 years, our children did not go to school." 'Freedom fighters' The three men and two women are the lead claimants in the reparations case.
Thousands of Kenyan peasants were rounded up and forced into camps by the British during what was known as the Mau Mau uprising against colonial rule. The UK has indicated that the claim is invalid because of the amount of time that has passed since the alleged abuses - and that any liability rested with the Kenyan authorities after independence in 1963. The core of the uprising was formed by members of the Kikuyu tribe, along with smaller numbers from other tribes. The veterans want the British government to acknowledge responsibility for atrocities in the pre-independence era and to compensate them. 'Barbaric treatment' The Mau Mau, which started as a grassroots Kikuyu movement to recover arable land appropriated by British settlers, evolved into a fully-fledged rebellion in 1952 that demanded Kenyan independence.
On October 20, 1952, the British government declared a state of emergency, and launched a military offensive known as Operation Anvil. Its hit-and-run tactics against white settlers prompted a heavy-handed response from colonial police and allied home guards who rounded up thousands of Kikuyu men and allegedly brutalised and tortured many. | |||||||||
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24 June, 2009
Kenyan Mau Maus in UK court bid
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