http://books.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,1674478,00.html


THE VICTORIAN HOLOCAUST

GEORGE MONBIOT, GUARDIAN -  In his book, Late Victorian Holocausts,
published in 2001, Mike Davis tells the story of famines that killed
between 12 and 29 million Indians. These people were, he demonstrates,
murdered by British state policy. When an El Nino drought destituted the
farmers of the Deccan plateau in 1876 there was a net surplus of rice
and wheat in India. But the viceroy, Lord Lytton, insisted that nothing
should prevent its export to England. In 1877 and 1878, at the height of
the famine, grain merchants exported a record 6.4m hundredweight of
wheat. As the peasants began to starve, officials were ordered "to
discourage relief works in every possible way". The Anti-Charitable
Contributions Act of 1877 prohibited "at the pain of imprisonment
private relief donations that potentially interfered with the market
fixing of grain prices". The only relief permitted in most districts was
hard labor, from which anyone in an advanced state of starvation was
turned away. In the labor camps, the workers were given less food than
inmates of Buchenwald. In 1877, monthly mortality in the camps equated
to an annual death rate of 94%.

As millions died, the imperial government launched "a militarized
campaign to collect the tax arrears accumulated during the drought". The
money, which ruined those who might otherwise have survived the famine,
was used by Lytton to fund his war in Afghanistan. Even in places that
had produced a crop surplus, the government's export policies, like
Stalin's in Ukraine, manufactured hunger. In the north-western
provinces, Oud and the Punjab, which had brought in record harvests in
the preceeding three years, at least 1.25m died.

Three recent books - Britain's Gulag by Caroline Elkins, Histories of
the Hanged by David Anderson, and Web of Deceit by Mark Curtis - show
how white settlers and British troops suppressed the Mau Mau revolt in
Kenya in the 1950s. Thrown off their best land and deprived of political
rights, the Kikuyu started to organise - some of them violently -
against colonial rule. The British responded by driving up to 320,000 of
them into concentration camps. Most of the remainder - more than a
million - were held in "enclosed villages". Prisoners were questioned
with the help of "slicing off ears, boring holes in eardrums, flogging
until death, pouring paraffin over suspects who were then set alight,
and burning eardrums with lit cigarettes". British soldiers used a
"metal castrating instrument" to cut off testicles and fingers. "By the
time I cut his balls off," one settler boasted, "he had no ears, and his
eyeball, the right one, I think, was hanging out of its socket." The
soldiers were told they could shoot anyone they liked "provided they
were black. . .

These are just two examples of at least 20 such atrocities overseen and
organized by the British government or British colonial settlers; they
include, for example, the Tasmanian genocide, the use of collective
punishment in Malaya, the bombing of villages in Oman, the dirty war in
North Yemen, the evacuation of Diego Garcia. . .



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