Opinion

The flogging of natives was the pillar of British colonialism

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By PETER MWAURA
Posted  Friday, February 26  2010 at  17:21

One Thursday morning, just over 14 years ago, outside a Nakuru court room, President Moi whipped Dr Richard Leakey. Of course, he did not personally flog the famous white Kenyan; he just made it possible for some Kanu youths to do so.

Dr Leakey had on June 20, 1995, formed Safina, a political party, to oppose the ruling Kanu. The president, never known to miss a trick, must have decided that Dr Leakey was getting a little uppish and needed to be slapped down.

He had announced that Dr Leakey, a descendant of a colonial, was a foreigner who wanted to reinstall colonialism. Presumably, therefore, he was fair game.

The palaeontologist had on August 10, 1995, gone to Nakuru where fellow Safina member Koigi wa Wamwere was being tried on the trumped-up charges of robbery with violence. The Kanu youths’ lashes left marks on his back.

They used hippo and rhino-hide whips, or nyanuthu in Kikuyu. The hippo-skin whip was a colonial symbol of subjugation.

Symbolically, and literally, the youths turned the tables. Mr Moi had a unique sense of poetic justice and grasp of colonial history. Flogging was used as a terror tactic to keep the natives in their place. From Nigeria to British Bechuanaland (now Botswana), the colonials used brute force to spread fear and defeat.

The natives were flogged on their bare buttocks or backs to induce maximum pain for infractions, including insubordination and laziness.

It was an accepted method of stamping authority. In Australia, the chief justice was reported on October 18, 1889, by an Adelaide newspaper, Christian Colonist, as telling natives it was in order for them to be flogged by their white masters.

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Colonial ideologues held that Africans, because of their “childlike nature”, understood body pain better than incarceration as punishment. They viewed flogging as a powerful deterrent on “savages”.

Steven Pierce and Anupama Rao, authors of Discipline and the Other Body: Correction, Corporeality, Colonialism, state that “the peculiar demands of establishing colonial rule over primitives” required flogging. They describe flogging as “an adjunct to the civilising mission”.

Tens of thousands of natives were flogged each year. But the most famous single incident in British Africa took place in front of a Nairobi courthouse on March 14, 1907, some 88 years before the Moi flogging of Dr Leakey.

Referred to nonchalantly by British officials as “the flogging of natives by certain Europeans in Nairobi”, the incident was reported by the London Daily Mail under the heading, Native Peril in East Africa. But it was more of white peril.

The story said “three Negroes” were “publicly flogged in front of a Nairobi courthouse, in the presence of a large crowd, by Capt Grogan, president of the Colonists’ Association.” The report said they were flogged “in consequence of their having insulted white women and gone unpunished by the authorities”.

At about 10 o’clock on that Thursday morning, a crowd of more than 100 settlers cheered as Capt Grogan, who later became a colonel, brought into town three Kikuyu rickshaw drivers with their hands tied behind their backs to flog them in public “for insulting my sister and a lady friend”.

He also brought a Maasai, a Mkamba and a Mkavirondo to witness the flogging. “I selected different tribes so as to let the news circulate among different tribes,” he later explained.

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Add a comment (4 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by BwanaChui

    Here we go again!.... it needs to be understood that flogging was a common punishment in Great Briatain at that time for all citizens and also in the Royal Navy....floggong wasnt a colonial punishment just for "natives" as the author of this article states.....there is a context and historical issue

    Posted  March 09, 2010 09:00 PM  
  2. Submitted by gcoconut

    To be read, of course - Thabari. Hey! what did you think? It is enlightening, if not for u, then for others. Don't be selfishh.

    Posted  February 27, 2010 08:16 PM  
  3. Submitted by dannie55

    your point? the neo colonialists of today , masquerading as leaders are worse! i thought colonialists left 48 years ago.

    Posted  February 27, 2010 07:25 PM  
  4. Submitted by Thabari

    What's the point of this story?

    Posted  February 27, 2010 12:33 AM