King tells Kenyans of ‘greatest sorrow’ for past UK wrongdoings

The King has spoken of the “abhorrent and unjustifiable acts of violence” committed against Kenyans during their fight for independence from Britain but stopped short of an apology.

Charles used a speech, delivered during a banquet in Kenya held in his honour, to speak of the “greatest sorrow” and “deepest regret” for the “wrongdoings” of the past, a period when Britain’s colonial administration violently put down Kenya’s battle for self-rule.

Kenya’s uprising, commonly known as the Mau Mau rebellion, was an armed movement that began in the early 1950s, fuelled by the resentment some members of the Kikuyu tribe felt towards their British rulers, European settlers who farmed land in Kenya and a lack of political representation.

The Kenya Human Rights Commission has claimed 90,000 Kenyans were executed, tortured or maimed during the British administration’s counter-insurgency.

Speaking after Mr Ruto, Charles told the 350 banquet guests gathered at the president’s official residence in the capital Nairobi: “It is the intimacy of our shared history that has brought our people together.

Royal visit to Kenya – Day One
The King and Queen Camilla attend a state banquet (Chris Jackson/PA)

“The wrongdoings of the past are a cause of the greatest sorrow and the deepest regret.

“There were as they waged, as you said at the United Nations, a painful struggle for independence and sovereignty, and for that, there can be no excuse.

“In coming back to Kenya, it matters greatly to me that I should deepen my own understanding of these wrongs, and that I meet some of those whose lives and communities were so grievously affected.”

Royal visit to Kenya – Day One
The King and Queen with President of Kenya Dr William Ruto and the First Lady Rachel Ruto arrive to attend a state banquet (Chris Jackson/PA)

The tomb recognises Kenya’s fallen heroes, military and civilian, and Charles’ floral tribute had a handwritten note which read: “In grateful remembrance – Charles R”.

The King and Queen were also given a preview of the Mashujaa Museum, due to open next year, shortly after Kenya celebrates its 60th anniversary of independence on December 12.

It tells Kenya’s national story and contains a Tunnel of Martyrs, which the royal couple walked down, chronicling the independence struggle and those who fell fighting for it as well of those killed in recent terrorist attacks.

The development came after a legal battle between a number of elderly victims and the British government.

The president said in his address: “If colonialism was brutal and atrocious to African people, colonial reaction to African struggles for sovereignty and self-rule was monstrous in its cruelty.

“It culminated in the Emergency, which intensified the worst excesses of colonial impunity and the indiscriminate victimisation of Africans.

“While there have been efforts to atone for the death, injury and suffering inflicted on Kenyan Africans by the colonial government, much remains to be done in order to achieve full reparations.”

Queen Elizabeth II death first anniversary
Queen Elizabeth II returns from Kenya where she was told of the death of her father King George VI (PA)

Charles told the guests “She arrived here in 1952 a princess, but left as queen”.

In tribute to his hosts spoke several sentences in Swahili and ended his speech with the phrase “Umoja ninguvu” – unity is strength.

The King and Queen’s five-day state visit aims to strengthen the UK’s relationship with Kenya which has remained strong despite their shared violent colonial past.

Neil Wigan, the UK High Commissioner to Nairobi, earlier gave his assessment about how Kenyans, from communities who suffered violence during the independence uprising, view the royal tour.

He said: “I’ve met quite a lot of people from the communities who were directly affected, and actually most of them are more focused on the future, about how we do things together.

“Most Kenyans are nothing but positive about the visit.”

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