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UK burned, dumped ‘embarrassing’ colonial documents

Published: 30 Nov 2013 - 05:24 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 09:22 am

LONDON: British officials burned and dumped at sea documents from colonies that were about to become independent in a systematic effort to hide their “dirty” secrets, newly released files showed yesterday.
Under “Operation Legacy”, officials in Kenya, Uganda, Malaysia, Tanzania, Jamaica and other former British colonial territories were briefed on how to dispose of documents that “might embarrass Her Majesty’s government”.
The newly declassified Foreign Office files reveal how the “splendid incinerator” at the Royal Navy base in Singapore was used to destroy lorry loads of files from the region.
Other officials wrote of documents being dumped “in deep and current-free water at the maximum practicable distance from shore”, according to the documents in the National Archives.
One dispatch from Kenya in 1961 mentions the formation of a committee dealing with “’dirty’ aspects of protective security” which would “clean” Kenyan intelligence files, according to The Times newspaper.
The British government agreed earlier this year to pay £14m ($23m) in compensation to more than 5,200 elderly Kenyans who were tortured and abused during the 1950s Mau Mau uprising against colonial rule.
afp