The British government used concentration camps during the 1952–1960 Mau Mau Uprising in British Kenya.[1][2] Thomas Askwith, the official tasked with designing the British 'detention and rehabilitation' programme during the summer and autumn of 1953, termed his system the Pipeline.[3] The British did not initially conceive of rehabilitating Mau Mau suspects through brute force and other ill-treatment—Askwith's final plan, submitted to Baring in October 1953, was intended as "a complete blueprint for winning the war against Mau Mau using socioeconomic and civic reform."[4] What developed, however, has been described as a British gulag.[5]
Two types of work camps were set up. The first type were based in Kikuyu districts with the stated purpose of achieving the Swynnerton Plan; the second were punitive camps, designed for the 30,000 Mau Mau suspects who were deemed unfit to return to the reserves. These forced-labour camps provided a much needed source of labour to continue the colony's infrastructure development.[6]
Colonial officers also saw the second sort of works camps as a way of ensuring that any confession was legitimate and as a final opportunity to extract intelligence. Probably the worst works camp to have been sent to was the one run out of Embakasi Prison, for Embakasi was responsible for the Embakasi Airport, the construction of which was demanded to be finished before the Emergency came to an end. The airport was a massive project with an unquenchable thirst for labour, and the time pressures ensured the detainees' forced labour was especially hard.[7]
The following list includes detention camps of various types, organized by district or province.[8]
The Museum of British Colonialism is also documenting the camps for exhibitions and awareness.
Southern Province
editMiscellaneous
editSee also
editReferences
edit- ^ Zane, Damian (27 August 2019). "The Kenyan school that was once a British detention camp". BBC News. Retrieved 26 December 2021.
- ^ Parry, Marc (18 August 2016). "Uncovering the brutal truth about the British empire". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 December 2021.
- ^ Elkins (2005), p. 109.
- ^ Elkins (2005), p. 108.
- ^ The term 'gulag' is used by David Anderson and Caroline Elkins. For Anderson, see his 2005 Histories of the Hanged, p. 7: "Virtually every one of the acquitted men . . . would spend the next several years in the notorious detention camps of the Kenyan gulag"; for Elkins, see the title of the British edition of her 2005 book: Britain's Gulag: The Brutal End of Empire in Kenya.
- ^ Elkins (2005), p. 153.
- ^ Elkins (2005), pp. 179–91.
- ^ Detention Camps (Rehabilitation Officers, Commons Sitting (23 January 1957), Hansard