By BDAfrica.com REPORTER
In Summary
- Only three weeks left before a deadline to sign a renewal contract for the British Army Training Unit Kenya.
- The Kenya Government is demanding that British soldiers who commit crimes in the country face local justice.
- President Uhuru Kenyatta made the ultimatum to Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond during recent negotiations.
Kenya is threatening to tear up its military
co-operation deal with the United Kingdom unless British soldiers who
commit crimes while in the country face justice in local courts.
With only three weeks left before a
deadline to sign a renewal contract, the Government is demanding that
the UK either give in or leave.
“President Uhuru Kenyatta… made
the ultimatum to Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond during tense
diplomatic negotiations over a long-standing deal,” the UK Mail on Sunday reported at the weekend.
“These are tough negotiations and
there will be no backing down by Kenya on this issue,” presidential
spokesman Manoah Esipisu was quoted as saying. “Kenya is not the same
country as when these agreements were signed.”
According to the MoS, the arrangement, which has run 40 years, is currently valued at about £58 million (Sh7.9 billion) a year, up from about Sh2.5 billion three years ago.
However, other estimates put it at a more modest £24 million (Sh3.2 billion).
It allows up to 10,000 British
troops a year to carry out military exercises in Kenya’s harsh terrain
before deploying to active operations in theatres such as Afghanistan
and Iraq.
It also includes military training for the Kenya Defence Forces.
However, while it requires
British troops to respect Kenyan laws, those who commit crimes are seen
to fall under the jurisdiction of UK military law.
If Kenya does not renew this agreement, the UK will have to find another location to prepare its troops — an uphill task given the unique conditions available in Laikipia and Samburu counties.
In April 2014,
the UK and Tanzania signed a pact that would allow British special
forces to train there. There is also talk that the UK could move its
soldiers to Djibouti. However, to find comparable terrain Britain would have to look to the Middle East, experts say.
The British Army Training Unit
Kenya (Batuk) is a “permanent training support unit” based mainly in
Nanyuki, but with a small rear element in Kahawa Barracks, just outside
Nairobi.
Under the agreement with the
Kenya Government, six infantry battalions per year carry out six-week
exercises. Royal Engineer Squadrons carry out civil engineering
projects, while two medical company group deployments provide primary
health care assistance to the civilian community.
While many of their interactions
with locals have been positive, there have been claims of rape of local
women and mass injuries from unexploded ordnance.
There have also been several unsolved crimes linked to British troops.
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