(Reuters) -
Britain expressed regret on Thursday for the abuse of Kenyans by
colonial forces during the 1950s Mau Mau insurgency and announced
compensation for 5,228 survivors, but stopped short of apologizing.
The deal, settled out of court
after three elderly Kenyan torture victims won the right in October to
sue the British government, could encourage people in other former
colonies to press claims over grievances dating back to the days of
Empire.
"The British government
recognizes that Kenyans were subject to torture and other forms of ill
treatment at the hands of the colonial administration," Foreign
Secretary William Hague told parliament.
"The British government sincerely regrets that these abuses took place."
The
5,228 claimants are due to receive 13.9 million pounds ($21.4 million),
about 2,600 pounds each, or about 340,000 Kenyan shillings in a country
where average annual income is some 70,000 shillings.
Lawyers representing the veterans will separately receive six million pounds in fees for years of work on the case.
London will also pay for a new memorial in Nairobi to the victims of torture and ill-treatment during the colonial era.
A
British diplomat said Hague stopped short of offering a formal apology
because that could be interpreted as the government accepting
responsibility, which would have had legal implications.
Mau Mau veterans danced, prayed and ululated to celebrate news of the agreement at an event in Nairobi.
"This
is confirmation we were freedom fighters and not terrorists. We have
been waiting a long time to hear the British say 'what we did in Kenya
was wrong'," said Gitu Wa Kahengeri, secretary general of the Mau Mau
War Veterans Association.
He said
the compensation was "not enough" but the veterans accepted the offer as
they feared Britain could prolong the court battle for years, by which
point it would be too late because some of the elderly men and women
could be dead.
"Where will we be
in 30 years?" Kahengeri asked around 100 veterans gathered in Nairobi.
"A bird in the hand is better than 10 in the bush."
"NOT A PRECEDENT"
The so-called Kenyan Emergency of 1952-1961 was one of the most violent episodes of British colonial rule in Africa.
Mau
Mau rebels fighting for land and an end to British domination attacked
British targets, causing panic among white settlers and alarming the
government in London.
Tens of
thousands of rebels were killed by colonial forces and their Kenyan
allies, while an estimated 150,000 people, many of them unconnected to
the Mau Mau, were detained in camps.
The
compensation package is likely to be examined closely by others who
complain of human rights abuses during British colonial times, although
Hague said he believed it would not give extra force to their claims.
"We
do not believe that this settlement establishes a precedent in relation
to any other former colonial administration," he said.
Claims
concerning the conduct of the British in Malaysia and Cyprus have
already emerged, and diplomats said they expected more to come, which
would be dealt with on a case-by-case basis.
The three Kenyans who took the British government to court were all survivors of the Emergency detention camps.
The
British government tried for three years to block the legal action by
Paulo Nzili, Wambugu Wa Nyingi and Jane Muthoni Mara, now in their 70s
and 80s, but the High Court ruled in October that they had the right to
sue for damages.
Nzili was
castrated while in detention, Nyingi suffered severe beatings during the
nine years for which he was held without charge, and Mara suffered
sexual abuse including rape using a soda bottle full of boiling water.
"This
is a story of a massive cover-up and 50 years later justice being done.
I don't know if there will be another case like this," said Harvard
professor Caroline Elkins, whose book 'Imperial Reckoning: The Untold
Story of Britain's Gulag in Kenya' served as the basis for the case.
In
2008, The Times newspaper reported that U.S. President Barack Obama's
Kenyan grandfather, Hussein Onyango Obama, had been imprisoned and
tortured by the British during the Mau Mau uprising. It quoted his wife,
Sarah Onyango, as saying he was whipped every day.
The
report fueled speculation that Obama might have a cool relationship
with Britain because of this, although a later biography of the
president cast doubt on the account.
(Additional reporting by Richard Lough in Nairobi; editing by James Macharia and Andrew Roche)
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