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  • In 2009, five Kenyan people took a petition

  • to the British Prime Minister's office.

  • They claimed they endured human rights abuses in the 1950s,

  • while Kenya was under British colonial rule and demanded reparations.

  • They had vivid accounts and physical scars from their experiences

  • but their testimonies were undermined.

  • They had no documentary evidence that Britain sanctioned systems of torture

  • against Kenyansat least, not yet.

  • Thousands of secret files were waiting to be discovered.

  • In 2010, a historian joined the trial as an expert witness

  • and attested to having seen references to missing documents.

  • They noted that Kenya had repeatedly requested the return of stolen papers,

  • which the British government had refused.

  • In fact, many historians suspected there were gaps in the archives.

  • As a result, the court ordered the release of any relevant documents.

  • And, days later, British officials acknowledged that 1,500 pertinent files

  • were being held in a high-security archive.

  • It soon became clear that these were just a small sample

  • of documents Britain hid between the 1950s and 70s,

  • while former colonies declared independence,

  • as part of a widespread colonial British policy called Operation Legacy.

  • The policy was for British colonial officers to destroy or remove

  • documentation that might incriminate Britain

  • and be of strategic value to the new governments.

  • They were instructed to destroy, alter,

  • or secretly transport these papers to the UK.

  • Documents slated for destruction were to be burnt to ashes

  • or sunk in weighted crates far from shore.

  • During the trial, between 2010 and 2013,

  • an independent historian revealed they had located

  • more than 20,000 previously hidden Operation Legacy files

  • from 37 former colonies.

  • Finally, an estimated 1.2 million colonial files,

  • sprawling kilometers in the archive's so-calledSpecial Collections,”

  • were also exposed.

  • And these were only the documents that British forces kept.

  • How many were destroyedand what information they contained

  • remains unknown.

  • About 3.5 tons of colonial documents were slated for incineration in Kenya.

  • Ultimately, Operation Legacy's objective was to obscure critical aspects

  • of the truth.

  • In the words of Britain's attorney-general in Kenya,

  • If we are going to sin, we must sin quietly.”

  • So, what really happened in Kenya?

  • Beginning in 1895, the British administration forcibly removed people

  • from their traditional lands,

  • giving the most fertile areas to European settlers to establish large-scale farms.

  • They mandated forced labor systems,

  • implemented reservations for Indigenous African peoples,

  • and restricted their movement.

  • Kenyan people resisted these incursions from the start

  • and grew increasingly organized over time.

  • One movement, the Kenya Land and Freedom Army,

  • aimed to forcibly remove white settlers and overthrow the colonial government.

  • When the British declared a state of emergency in 1952,

  • they were giving themselves permission to take otherwise illegal special measures

  • to regain control.

  • The newly revealed Operation Legacy documents

  • confirmed that people suspected of participating in the resistance

  • were subjected to horrible abuses.

  • Between 1952 and 1959,

  • the British imprisoned over 80,000 people without trial,

  • sentenced over 1,000 people convicted as terrorists to death,

  • and imposed extreme surveillance and interrogation tactics.

  • Some people were beaten to death.

  • Others were raped or castrated.

  • Many were shackled at the wrist for years.

  • Children were killed.

  • One person was burnt alive.

  • Ndiku Mutwiwa Mutua testified to being castrated while handcuffed

  • and blindfolded.

  • Wambugu Wa Nyingi said he was suspended upside-down, beaten,

  • and had water thrown on his face until he could barely breathe.

  • Jane Muthoni Mara said she was sexually violated with a hot bottle,

  • and imprisoned for years without cause.

  • In response to the new evidence,

  • the British government issued a formal apology,

  • and made an out-of-court financial settlement

  • with the 5,228 Kenyan claimants ultimately involved in the case.

  • The original five claimants had made history

  • and paved the way for it to be rightfully rewritten.

  • The uncovered files challenge fundamental myths about British colonialism

  • as a benevolent institution that brought freedom and democracy to its subjects,

  • then graciously gave them independence.

  • Instead, the newly exposed evidence confirms what many people knew to be true,

  • because they lived it

  • and survived to rescue history from the ashes.

In 2009, five Kenyan people took a petition

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C1C2 words : 7 (The records the British Empire didn't want you to see - Audra A. Diptée(The records the British Empire didn't want you to see - Audra A. Diptée)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2023 年 04 月 28 日
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