Showing posts with label Thomas Cholmondeley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thomas Cholmondeley. Show all posts

Thursday, April 30, 2009

A White Kenyan Aristocrat Has Stood Trial For Murdering A Black Trespasser & Is Awaiting His Fate!




There is a trial that has stirred up racial unease in Kenya again.A rich,white Kenyan aristocrat denies murdering a black Kenyan stonemason because he was poaching on his father's huge estate.He claims that he was really just shooting at the poacher's dogs.I don't buy it,but two civilian lay assessors did because they delivered a "non-binding verdict of not guilty." Thomas Cholmondeley better hope that the judge who is deciding his fate reaches the same conclusion.

Here's more on this story from the Telegraph:

"Thomas Cholmondeley, the Eton-educated aristocrat accused of murdering a Kenyan poacher, has described his three years behind bars in a grim maximum security prison.

In his first interview for more than a year, the sole heir of Kenya's most famous white settler family said he was "measuring my life in hours" as he runs down the days before his verdict, due next week.

The ruling was scheduled for Thursday, but was put back at the last minute.

It was the latest in a series of delays which mean that Mr Cholmondeley, the only white man held at Nairobi's Kamiti Maximum Security jail, is now its longest-serving remand prisoner.

"Since this whole thing started, I have spent something like six per cent of my time actually in court," he told The Daily Telegraph from behind bars at the 3,600-inmate facility.

"The worst part of it all has been the not knowing when it will finish. There have been so many possible endings, but it's all just dragged on and on.

"I have lost out on a third of my sons' lives. They were six and eight when I got here, now they have both shot up like beanstalks. Missing all that has been dreadfully difficult."

Mr Cholmondeley, 40, denies murdering Robert Njoya, 37, a Kenyan stonemason, after finding him poaching on the 48,000 acre Rift Valley estate owned by Mr Cholmondeley's father, the 5th Baron Delamere.

Mr Cholmondeley has admitted firing his Winchester rifle on May 10, 2006, but maintains that he aimed only at the poacher's dogs.

The trial has reopened racial tensions between Kenya's poor blacks and privileged whites descended from colonial-era British settlers, of which the Delameres are perhaps the most famous."(END OF EXCERPT)Read the rest here.

And,oh by the way,this is the second black man that Thomas Cholmondeley has killed! Here's more on that from buzzle.com:

"After the first killing, there was a great deal of sympathy for the Honourable Tom Cholmondeley among Kenya's disparate white population. The aristocrats who own vast tracts of land, the alcohol and drug-fuelled "Kenya cowboys" living the fast life in tourism and conservation, and the middle-class suburbanites who "love Africa" but despatch their children to school in England could all understand how the 38-year-old scion of the country's most prominent white settler family, and heir to the Delamere baronetcy, shot dead a black game warden who ventured on to his ranch last year. Old white families in Kenya's Great Rift valley are so besieged by poaching, murder and crime, his sympathisers said, that life has become very difficult for the haves. It was a mistake any one could have made. The authorities agreed, and let the Eton old-boy go.

The second time, even before the evidence was heard, sympathy was in short supply. This time Cholmondeley was accused of killing a black poacher. "The sense here among both communities [white and black] is nail him," says Michael Cunningham-Reid, a stepbrother to Cholmondeley's father. "Once is forgivable, twice is inexcusable."

Cholmondeley, who is now on trial for murder - which he denies - has become a liability for Kenya's 30,000-strong white community, which, through more than 40 years of black rule, has clung on to its privileged lifestyle - and in the case of 12 or so old settler families, great swathes of land - largely by keeping its collective head down. Cholmondeley, who can expect to inherit a 100,000-acre ranch along with the title of Lord Delamere, had committed the unforgivable sin of rocking the boat.

The white community had spent decades trying to shake off the image of Kenya's Rift Valley as the "Happy Valley" playground of decadent and racist toffs, a view shaped by wartime Britain's fascination with the salacious details of adultery, drugs and debauchery provided in the trial of Sir Jock Delves Broughton (who was eventually acquitted of murdering his wife's lover, Lord Erroll). Infuriatingly, the story was given new life in the 80s by the film White Mischief, starring Greta Scacchi and Charles Dance. Now Cholmondeley's killings have prompted wags to redub the place "Trigger Happy Valley".

The trial coincides with the latest wave of doubt among white people over their future in Kenya - people who have always wondered whether they truly belonged, and whether one day they might be expelled like the Asians from Uganda and white farmers from Zimbabwe - and growing insecurity after a spate of murders of white people.

Kenya's independence came in 1963. A majority of the 60,000 white settlers were gone by the end of the decade. Those who remained generally took out Kenyan citizenship (although many secretly, and illegally under Kenyan law, keep their British passports). One who stayed was Michael Cunningham-Reid, a nephew of the late Lord Mountbatten and part of the extended Delamere clan that forged the path for aristocratic settlers into East Africa with an energetic enthusiasm for hunting, drinking and sex. Cunningham-Reid's mother, Ruth Ashley, the daughter of Lord Mount Temple, was on to her third marriage by the time she wed the Fourth Baron Delamere, Thomas Cholmondeley, during the second world war. When they divorced in 1955, Cholmondeley went on to marry Diana Caldwell, the by-then famous widow of Sir Jock Delves Broughton.

Today, Cunningham-Reid, 78, lives in the heart of Happy Valley, the exclusive town of Karen (named after the author Karen Blixen, who memorialised her life in Kenya in Out of Africa). "When I came out of the army in 1948, my stepfather, Lord Delamere, said, 'You've only been in the army three years. You haven't learned to do anything. No one's going to employ you in the City because you've got no training. You'd better come to Kenya and work on my farms.' That was 1948. I'm still here," he says.

The family trustees bought him an 800-acre farm and, a couple of years after that, Cunningham-Reid was successful enough to buy a 6,000-acre ranch to farm sheep and wheat. In the 1950s, during the Kenya Emergency, when Mau Mau rebels rose up against the crown, Cunningham-Reid found himself back in the army and in charge of Kenyan soldiers loyal to the UK. His views of that time - and the language he uses, redolent of old-school racism - have not changed greatly despite the recognition today of the atrocities committed by British forces. "The atrocities of the Kenya regiment were there but not on the scale of the Mau Mau," he says. "The amazing thing about the Kenyan is you could find him in the forest, shoot two of his pals, capture him and he would be working for you two days later."

At independence, much of the white population weighed up the benefits of a glorious lifestyle against what they considered the nightmare of black rule - and decided to get out.

Cunningham-Reid took a gamble. He believed that the big issue was the land, and his best hope of remaining in Kenya would be to get rid of it. "All my friends were hooking it, saying, 'We can't live with a fucking black man telling us what to do,'" he says. "I farmed happily until independence in 1963. But the British government made £22m available to buy out farmers in the Rift Valley. I was the first in the queue. Although I intended to stay, I thought all the farms would be broken up into small plots and we'd be plagued by squatters and the land would be a big political issue."

He used the money to buy a mansion in Karen, a house that was being left behind by Lady Twining, wife of the former governor of Tanganyika. "I basically liked the African and I couldn't picture myself going back to England and buying a very small farm or something," he says. The money also extended to a house on the coast and a hotel next to Lake Naivasha, which was to become the crucible of the family's future in conservation.

The gamble paid off. More than four decades later he is still installed in Lady Twining's sprawling old house, with servants to hand and the chauffeur ever ready with the Mercedes for the swift drive to his club. He has no regrets about staying. "There were times when I had serious doubts: have I been a complete fool? Am I going to lose everything? There have been moments when I considered sending my family away. Not myself though. I'd stay and go down with the ship," he says. "The white community has survived by laying low, keeping their mouths shut. We stayed out of politics. That was the big taboo. We must be no challenge to the black man's political power."(END OF EXCERPT)Read the rest here.