[Biggest 
Islamic 
web site in the 
U.S.]
P.O. Box 356, Kingsville, MD 21087.
Phone: 410-435-5000.
Disclaimer: Views expressed are not necessarily 
shared by editorial committee.
Responses (positive or negative) up to 250 words are welcome.
Names will be withheld on request.
--------------------------------------------
MASAI 
WOMEN 
IN KENYA HAVE FACED RAPE BY BRITISH 
TROOPS for 20 YEARS
[With thanks to Br. Omar in Virginia. Br. Omar 
wonders what the British 
troops may be doing in their dealings with 
Iraqi 
women in war time, when they did 
this in peace time Kenya.]
[Editor's notes:
[The British paper, 
The Guardian
, 
has published a 
report on the rapes 
committed by British troops stationed in Kenya. 
These rapes are occurring EVEN 
WITHOUT A WAR. The paper quotes some of the women 
who have finally come forward. We 
excerpt below only the statistical aspect of the 
report.]
[It appears that Kenya has continued to be 
colonized by the British even 
after "independence." As recent incidents 
indicated, 
Israel 
too has a heavy 
presence in Kenya.]
"Over 200 Masai women in this area can tell 
stories of rapes that are 
supported by some independent evidence; sometimes 
police or medical records, more 
often the testimony of their chiefs. And hundreds 
more women from the Samburu 
tribe around Archers Post, another training area 
in northern Kenya, have also 
come forward with similar stories. 
Martyn Day, a matter-of-fact solicitor, remembers 
when the women first 
approached him with their shocking claims. He was 
in Dol Dol handling another 
breakthrough case; the community's demand for 
reparation for the harm caused by 
unexploded bombs left on their land by the 
British army. "About half a dozen women 
came up to me in September 2001," Day remembers, 
"They said, 'Look, we have 
also been injured by the British army.' To be 
honest, at that time I was 
slightly dismissive of them - I had so much on my 
plate with the bomb cases and I 
thought it would just be a couple of cases and 
damn difficult to prove 
anything." 
Last summer, Day won a grand victory on the bomb 
cases, when the Ministry of 
Defence agreed to pay ££4.5m in compensation to 
those injured and bereaved by 
the army's unexploded ordnance. "Then the women 
came back to me," Day says. 
"This time we had a meeting and 85 women turned 
up. I said, 'OK, I'm sure you've 
got real grievances, but it will be impossible to 
move on this without 
evidence.' But when I came back last December, 
they had obtained documentary 
evidence, medical records and so on. I was really 
impressed."
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2003-05-28 Wed 18:15ct