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1 year oldUnder rainy skies, Charles and Camilla were given a ceremonial red carpet welcome by Ruto on Tuesday morning. They later laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior in the Uhuru Gardens memorial park.
Uhuru means “freedom” in Swahili and the site is steeped in Kenya’s turbulent history. Independence was declared there at midnight on December 12, 1963. The Union flag was lowered and replaced with Kenya’s black, red, green and white flag.
The gardens were built on the site of a camp where British colonial authorities detained suspected Mau Mau guerrillas during the suppression of their 1952-1960 uprising.
The so-called “Emergency” period was one of the bloodiest insurgencies of the British empire and at least 10,000 people—mainly from the Kikuyu tribe—were killed.
Tens of thousands more were rounded up and detained without trial in camps where reports of executions, torture and vicious beatings were common.
‘Greatest sorrow’
Charles said the “wrongdoings of the past are a cause of the greatest sorrow and the deepest regret”.
He said he hoped to “meet some of those whose lives and communities were so grievously affected” by colonial abuses.
“None of this can change the past but by addressing our history with honesty and openness, we can perhaps demonstrate the strength of our friendship today, and in so doing, we can I hope continue to build an ever-closer bond for the years ahead,” he said.
Ruto said the colonial response to Kenyans’ push for 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,” he said at the state banquet.
He said Charles’s “courage and readiness to shed light on uncomfortable truths” was a first step to deliver “progress beyond tentative and equivocal half measures of past years”.
But it did not deliver the formal apology sought by some in Kenya.
On Sunday, the Kenya Human Rights Commission urged Charles to make an “unequivocal public apology... for the brutal and inhuman treatment inflicted on Kenyan citizens”, and pay reparations for colonial-era abuses.
Britain agreed in 2013 to compensate more than 5,000 Kenyans who had suffered abuse during the Mau Mau revolt, in a deal worth nearly 20 million pounds ($25 million at today’s rates).
Then foreign secretary William Hague said Britain “sincerely regrets” the abuses but stopped short of a full apology.
“The negative impacts of colonisation are still being felt to date, they are being passed from generation to generation, and it’s only fair the king apologises to begin the healing process,” delivery rider Simson Mwangi, 22, told AFP.
But 33-year-old chef Maureen Nkatha disagreed.
“He doesn’t have to apologise, it’s time for us to move on and forward,” she said.
Family ties
Charles said Kenya had “long held such special meaning for my family” and spoke of his mother’s “particular affection” for the country and its people.
Kenya is where Queen Elizabeth II—then a princess—learned in 1952 of the death of her father, King George VI, marking the start of her historic 70-year reign.
Charles has previously made three official visits and this week’s tour is being staged 40 years since his mother’s state visit in November 1983.
Kenya and Britain are close economic partners with two-way trade at around 1.2 billion pounds ($1.5 billion) over the year to the end of March 2023.
The royal programme focuses on efforts to tackle climate change, with Charles long a fervent campaigner for action to protect the environment, as well as support for creative arts, technology and youth.
Following their two-day stay in the capital, the royal couple will travel to the Indian Ocean port city of Mombasa, stopping at a marine nature reserve and meeting religious leaders.
(AFP)
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