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Kenyan herdsmen take court action against British Army


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WSWS : News & Analysis : Africa

Kenyan herdsmen take court action against British Army
By David Rowan
27 November 2001
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The Labour government has called on the High Court in London to block a £4 million 
compensation claim brought against the Ministry of Defence (MoD) and the British Army 
by nomadic herdsmen in Kenya.

Up to 200 members of the Masai and Samburu communities are seeking compensation for 
the deaths of as many as 50 people killed by unexploded munitions. The British Army 
has regularly left munitions after conducting military training exercises in the 
Archers Post and Dol Dol areas of Northern Kenya, about five hours drive north of the 
capital Nairobi. The herdsmen are also seeking damages for those injured and maimed 
and for the loss of livestock.

The law firm Leigh Day and Company representing the Kenyans has accused the British 
government and MoD of deliberately seeking to pervert the cause of justice in 
attempting to have the case thrown out of the High Court and moved to Kenya. Solicitor 
Martyn Day told reporters that the MoD hope that "by moving the case to Kenya it will 
never be heard. It would in fact be sending the case into oblivion. There is no legal 
aid funding for a case such as this in Kenya". Day explained that Kenyan lawyers are 
inexperienced in handling compensation cases and that even if the case were heard the 
level of damages awarded would be considerably less than in Britain.

The British government denies any liability for the deaths and injuries caused by 
unexploded munitions, claiming that responsibility for clearing the military training 
areas lies with the Kenyan government. For their part, the Kenyan military have denied 
responsibility, stating that they have not used the areas for training since the early 
90s.

In fact, a report commissioned by Martyn Day points to the MoD and British Army being 
directly responsible for the deaths and injuries, and indicates they have displayed 
gross negligence and callous indifference as far as the herdsmen are concerned.

The report was one of two that appeared in the Observer newspaper last July. The first 
was by Observer journalist Kamal Ahmed, who travelled to the Archers Post and Dol Dol 
military training and testing areas, which have been used by the British Army 
continuously since the Second World War.

His report provided harrowing details of those killed and injured by unexploded 
munitions. It went on to explain the difficulties that the nomadic farmers face in 
trying to feed themselves and their herds in this drought-stricken region, which has 
not seen significant rain fall for four years. The herdsmen and their families have to 
be constantly on the move in search of areas for grazing.

This has meant that they have unwittingly moved into open areas that the British Army 
use for military exercises. The British military blame the herdsmen, who they argue 
"should not be walking their animals in training areas" and claim that there are clear 
warning signs. But the article explains that the majority of the nomadic people do not 
read and are unaware that they have crossed into a military area.

The majority of those killed are children attracted to the shining metal of the 
unexploded weapons. A nurse at a hospital showed the reporter a comatose 10-year old 
boy, blinded with multiple injuries from British munitions. His leg had been amputated.

"It is sad, so sad" she said. "Sometimes they can't even collect the bodies, they are 
in pieces. His friends died in the same explosion. It is mainly the children that are 
harmed. They are so curious. We don't see any warnings. How can you give people 
warnings who can't read?"

The second report was by David Taylor, an unexploded ordnance (UXO) specialist and 
ex-Royal Engineer who has advised former British Prime Minister John Major on weapons' 
disposal. Taylor had been hired by Martyn Day to provide technical input and research 
to establish whether the British Army was responsible for the unexploded ordnance.

His report was compiled on visits to the Archers Post and Dol Dol training areas in 
April, May and June 2001 and runs contrary to British military claims that they did 
not fire the unexploded weapons located in the area. Taylor states that this claim is 
"not plausible in view of the evidence encountered" by him in the area.

Taylor identified a number of military items that had specific markings, including lot 
numbers, which identified precisely that the weapons were those supplied exclusive to 
the British Army. He went on to state that some, possibly all, UXO encountered by him 
was of British origin, and concluded from this that these munitions were responsible 
for a "significant proportion, and possibly all, deaths and injuries caused by UXO in 
the Archers Post And Dol Dol areas".

He noted that there were tens and possibly hundreds of unexploded ordnance in the 
area. British Army efforts to clear the area had been "ineffective" and undertaken 
mainly in response to the legal action, in an attempt to eliminate "incriminating 
evidence". In areas that had supposedly been cleared by the army Taylor found several 
UXO in close proximity.

He points out that the British Army attempted to block his access to the areas citing 
safety grounds and that military clearance operations were suspended after he left.

Both reports are a damning indictment of the criminal negligence of the British 
military.

The MoD's latest action continues its efforts to suppress the facts about its 
culpability in the deaths of innocent civilians. It is an example of the extreme 
arrogance with which Britain treats its former colonial territories in Africa. In 
attempting to force the case to be tried in the Kenyan courts, London knows that it 
can rely on President Moi to suppress all complaints about the actions of the British 
military.






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