THE 1904 and 1911 ANGLO-MAASAI "AGREEMENTS"

Sections

Archive

Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031

Newsletter

Subscribe to newsletter:


  • email Email to a friend
  • print Print version
  • Add to your del.icio.us del.icio.us
  • Digg this story Digg this

Did you enjoy this article?

(total 1 votes)
Adjust font size: Decrease font Enlarge font
image
1904 MAASAI AGREEMENT
AGREEMENT, dated 10th August, 1904, between HIS MAJESTY'S COMMISSIONER for the
EAST AFRICA PROTECTORATE and the CHIEFS of the MASAI TRIBE.
We, the Undersigned, being the Lybons and Chiefs (representatives) of the existing clans and sections of the Masai tribes in East Africa Protectorate, having, this 9th day of August, 1904, met Sir Donald Stewart, His Majesty's Commissioner for the East Africa Protectorate and discussed fully the question of a land settlement scheme for the Masai, have, of our own free will, decided that it is for our best interests to remove our people, flocks, and herds into definite reservations away from the railway line, and away from any land that may be thrown open to European settlement.
We have, after having already discussed the matter with Mr. Hobley at Naivasha and Mr. Ainsworth at Nairobi, given this matter every consideration, and we recognize that the Government, in taking up this question, are taking into consideration our best interests.
Now we, being fully satisfied that the proposals for our removal to definite and final reserves are for the undoubted good of our race, have agreed as follows:-
That the Elburgu, Gekunuki, Loita, Damat, and Laitutok sections shall remove absolutely to Laikipia, and the boundaries of the Settlement shall be, approximately, as follows:-
On the north, by the Loroghi Mountains.
On the west, by the Laikipia (Ndoror) Escarpment.
On the south, by the Lesuswa or Nyam and Guaso Narok Rivers.
On the east, by Kisima (approximate).
And by the removal of the foregoing sections to the reserve we undertake to vacate the whole of the Rift Valley, to be used by the Government for the purposes of European settlement. Further, that the Kaptei, Matapatu, Ndogalani, and Sigarari sections shall remove into the territory originally occupied by them to the south of Donyo Lamuyu (Ngongo), and the Kisearian stream, an to comprise within the area the Donyo Lamuyu, Ndogalani, and Matapatu Mountains, and the Donyo Narok, and to extend to Sosian on the west.
In addition to the foregoing, Lenana, as Chief Lybon, and his successors, to be allowed to occupy the land lying in between the Mbagathi and Kisearian streams from Donyo Lamuyu to the point where both streams meet, with the exception of land already occupied by Mr. Oulton, Mr. McQueen, and Mr. Paterson.
In addition to the foregoing, we asked that a right of road to include certain access to water be granted to us to allow of our keeping up communications between the two reserved areas, and further, that we be allowed to retain control of at least 5 square miles of land (at a point on the slopes of Kinangop to be pointed out by Legalishu and Masakondi), whereat we can carry out our circumcision rites and ceremonies, in accordance with the custom of our ancestors.
We ask, as a most important point in this arrangement, that the Government will establish and maintain a station on Laikipia, and that officers whom we know and trust may be appointed to look after us there.
Also that the Government will pay reasonable compensation for any Masai cultivation at present existing near Nairobi.
In conclusion, we wish to state that we are quite satisfied with the foregoing arrangement, and we bind ourselves and our successors, as well as our people, to observe them.
We would, however, ask that the settlement now arrived at shall be enduring so long as the Masai as a race shall exist, and that European or other settlers shall not be allowed to take up land in the Settlements.
In confirmation of this Agreement, which has been read and fully explained to us, we hereby set our marks against our names, as under:-
LANANA, Son of Mbatian, Lybon of all the Masai.
MASAKONDI, Son of Arariti, Lybon at Naivasha.
Signed at Nairobi, August 15, 1904:-
LEMANI, Elmura of Matapatu.
LETEREGI, ditto.
LELMURUA, Leganan of Kapte.
LAKOMBE, Elmura of Kapte.
LIMOISONG, Elmura of Ndogalani
LISIARI, Elmura of Ndogalani.
MEPAKU, Head Elmoran of Matapatu.
LAMBARI, Leganon of Ndogalani.
Naivasha, representing Elburgu, Gekunuku, Loita, Damat, and Laitutok:-
LEGALISHU, Leganon of Elburgu.
OLMUGEZA, ditto.
OLAINOMODO, ditto.
OLOTOGIA, ditto..
OLIETI, ditto.
LANAIRUGU, ditto.
LINGALDU, ditto.
GINOMUN, ditto.
LIWALA, Leganan of Gekunuki.
LEMBOGI, Leganan of Laitutok.
Signed at Nairobi, August 15, 1904:-.
SABORI, Elmura of Elburgu.
We, the undersigned, were interpreters in this Agreement:
C. W. HOBLEY, (Swahili).
MWE s/o LITHIGU (Masai).
LYBICH s/o KERETU (Masai).
WAZIRI-BIN-MWYNBEGO (Masai).
I, Donald Stewart, K.C.M.G., His Majesty's Commissioner for the East Africa Protectorate, hereby agree to the foregoing, provided the Secretary of State approves of the Agreement, and in witness thereof I have this 10th day of August, 1904, set my hand and seal.
D. Stewart
We, the undersigned officers of the East Africa Protectorate Administration, hereby certify that we were present at the meeting between His Majesty's Commissioner and the Masai at Naivasha on the 9th August, 1904, and we further heard this document fully explained to them, and witnessed their marks affixed to same:
C. W. HOBLEY,
Acting Deputy Commissioner.
JOHN AINSWORTH,
His Majesty's Sub-Commissioner, Ukamba.
S. S. BAGGE,
His Majesty's Sub-Commissioner, Kisumu.
J. W. T. McCLELLAN,
Acting Sub-Commissioner, Naivasha.
W. J. MONSON,
Acting Secretary to the Administration.
I, Donald Stewart, K.C.M.G., His Majesty's Commissioner for the East Africa Protectorate, hereby further agree to the foregoing parts of this Agreement concerning Kapte, Matapatu, Ndogalani, and Sigarari Masai, provided the Secretary of State approves of the Agreement, and in witness thereof I have this 15th. day of August, 1904, set my hand and seal.
D. Stewart
We, the undersigned officers of the East Africa Protectorate, hereby certify that we were present at the meeting between His Majesty's Commissioner and the Masai at Nairobi on the 15th August, 1904, and we further heard this document explained to them, and witnessed their marks affixed to same:
C. W. HOBLEY,
Acting Deputy Commissioner.
JOHN AINSWORTH,
His Majesty's Sub-Commissioner. Ukamba.
T. T. GILKISON,
Acting Land Officer.
W. J. MONSON,
Acting Secretary to the Administration.
I, the undersigned, hereby certify that I translated the contents of this document to the Masai Lybich, who, I believe, interpreted it correctly to the Masai assembled at both Naivasha and Nairobi.
JOHN AINSWORTH,
His Majesty's Sub-Commissioner.
Reprinted from East Africa Protectorate, Correspondence Relating to the Masai, Command Paper No. 20360. Received 28 March 1910, House of Commons Parliamentary Papers, 1911 Volume LII pp., 730-731.
--
1911 MAASAI AGREEMENT
AGREEMENT
We, the undersigned, being the Paramount Chief of all the Masai and his regents and the representatives of that portion of the Masai tribe living in the Northern Masai Reserve, as defined in the agreement entered into with the late Sir Donald William Stewart, Knight Commander of the Most Distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George, His Majesty's Commissioner for the East Africa Protectorate, on the ninth day of August, one thousand and nine hundred and four, and more particularly set out in the Proclamation of May thirtieth one thousand nine hundred and six and published in the Official Gazette of June first one thousand nine hundred and six, do hereby on our own behalf and on behalf of our people, whose representatives we are, being satisfied that it is to the best interest of their tribe that the Masai people should inhabit one area and should not be divided into two sections as must arise under the agreement aforesaid whereby they were reserved to the Masai tribe two separate and distinct areas of land, enter of our own free will into the following agreement with Sir Edouard Percy Cranwill Girouard, Knight Commander of the Most Distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George, Member of the Distinguished Service Order, Governor and Commander in Chief of the East Africa Protectorate, hereinafter referred to as the Governor.
We agree to vacate at such time as the Governor may direct the Northern Masai Reserve which we have hitherto inhabited and occupied and to remove by such routes as the Governor may notify to us our people, herds and flocks to such area on the south side of the Uganda Railway as the Governor may locate to us the said area being bounded approximately as follows and as shown on the attached map.
(Not reproduced)
On the south by the Anglo-German frontier:
On the west by the Ol-orukuti Range, by the Amala River, otherwise called Eng-are-dabash or Eng-are-e-'n-gipai, by the eastern and northern boundaries of the Sotik Native Reserve, and by a line drawn from the most northerly point of the northern boundary of the Sotik Native Reserve to the south-western boundary of the land set aside for Mr. E. Powys Cobb on Mau;
On the north by the southern and eastern boundaries of the said land set aside for Mr. E. Powys Cobb, and by a straight line drawn from the north-eastern boundary of the said land to the highest point of Mount Suswas otherwise called Ol-doinyo onyoke;
On the east by the southern Masai Native Reserve as defined in the Proclamation dated June eighteenth one thousand nine hundred and six, and published in the Official Gazette of July first one thousand nine hundred and six.
Providing that nothing in this agreement contained shall be deemed to deprive the Masai tribe of the rights reserved to it under the agreement of August ninth one thousand nine hundred and four aforesaid to the land on the slopes of Kinopop whereon the circumcision rights and ceremonies may be held.
In witness whereof and in confirmation of this agreement which has been fully explained to us we hereby set our marks (finger impressions) against our names as under:-
Mark of.SEGI, son of Ol-onana (Lenana), Paramount Chief of all the Masai.
Mark of.OL-LE-GELESHO (Legalishu), Regent during the minority of Segi, head of the Molelyan Clan, and chief spokesman (Ol-aigwenani) of the Il-Kitoip (Il-Merisho) age-grade of the Purko Masai.
Mark of.NGAROYA, Regent during the minority of Segi, of the Aiser Clan.
Mark of.OL-LE-YELI, head of the Mokosen Clan of the Purko Masai, and one of the spokesmen (Ol-sigwenani) of the Il-Kitoip (Il-Merisho) age-grade of the Purko Masai.
Mark of.OL-LE-TURERE, head of the Mokesen Clan of the Purko Masai.
Mark of.OLE-LE-MALIT, one of Masikondi's representatives, of the Lughumae branch of the Aiser Clan of the Purko Masai.
Mark of.OL-LE-MATIPE, one of Masikondi’s representatives, of the Lughumae branch of the Aiser Clan of the Purko Masai.
Mark of.OL-LE-NAKOLA, head of the Tarosero Clan of the Purko Masai.
Mark of.OL-LE-NAIGISA, head of the Aiser Clan of the Purko Masai.
Mark of.MARMAROI, uncle and personal attendant of Segi.
Mark of.SABURI. The Prime Minister of the late Chief Ol-onana (Lenana) and principal elder of the Southern Masai Reserve.
Mark of.AGALI, uncle of Segi, representing the Loita Masai.
Mark of.OL-LE-TANYAI of the Tarosero Clan, chief spokesman (Ol-sigwenani) of the Lamek (Meitaroni) agegrade of the Purko Masai.
The above set their marks to this agreement at Nairobi on the fourth day of April nineteen hundred and seven.
A. C. HOLLIS,
Secretary, Native Affairs.
OL-LE-MASIKONDI, head of the Lughumas section of the Aiser Clan: chief elder of the Purko Masai, called in the former treaty of 01 Oiboni of the Purko Masai.
OL-LE-BATIET, head of the Aiser Clan of the Purko Masai on Laikipia, Ol aigwenani of the age known as Il Merisho.
The above set their marks to this agreement at Rumuruti on the 13th day of April nineteen hundred and eleven.
E. D. BROWN
Assistant District
Commissioner,
Laikipia.
Witnesses:
J. M. COLLYER
D/C. Laikipia.
His Mark:.OL-LE-LENGIRI, of the Aiser Clan Purko Masai.
His Mark:.OL-LE-GESHEEN, head of Tarosero Clan of Purko Masai.
His Mark:.OL-LE-SALON, brother of Ol-le-Kotikosh, as a deputy for Ol-le-Kotikosh.
The above set their marks to this agreement at Rumuruti on 19th. day of April 1911.
E. D. BROWNE,
A.D.C., i/c Laikipia.
We, the undersigned, certify that we correctly interpreted this document to the Chief, Regents, and Representatives of the Masai who were present at the meeting at Nairobi.
A. C. HOLLIS,
OL-LE-TINKA, of the Il-Aiser Clan.
We the undersigned certify that we have correctly interpreted this document to the Representatives of the Masai at Rumuruti.
A. J. M. COLLYER,
District Commissioner.
OL LE TINKA. His mark.
In consideration of the above, I, Edouard Percy Cranwill Girouard, Knight Commander of the Most Distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George, Member of the Distinguished Service Order, Governor and Commander in Chief of the East Africa Protectorate, agree on behalf of His Majesty's Government but subject to the approval of His Majesty's Principal Secretary of State for the Colonies to reserve for the exclusive use of the Masai tribe the area on the south side of the Uganda Railway as defined above and as shown on the attached map, which area is coadunate with the Southern Masai Native Reserve and to further extend the existing Southern Masai Native Reserve by an addition of an area of approximately three thousand and one hundred square miles, such area as shown on the accompanying map the approximate boundaries being on the south the Anglo-German Frontier, on the west the eastern boundary of the aforesaid Southern Masai Reserve, on the north and east by the
Uganda Railway zone from the Athi River to Sultan Hamud Railway Station thence in a line drawn from the said station to the north-west point of the Chiulu Range thence along the Chiulu Range to the south-eastern extremity thereof thence by a straight line to the meeting point of the Eng-are-Rongai River and the Tsavo Rivers thence by the Eng-are Rongai River to the Anglo-German frontier and to undertake on behalf of His Majesty's Government to endeavour to remove all European settlers from the said areas and not to lease or grant any land within the said areas (except such land as may be required for mining purposes or for any public purpose) without the sanction of the Paramount Chief and the representatives of the Masai tribe.
In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and official seal this twenty-sixth day of April one thousand nine hundred and eleven.
Signed sealed and delivered by the within named Sir Edouard Percy Cranwill Girouard in the presence of
C. HOLLIS
E. P. C. GIROUARD
We, the undersigned were present at a meeting between His Excellency the Governor and the Masai at Nairobi on the fourth day of April one thousand nine hundred and eleven, and we heard this document explained to the Chief and the representatives of the Masai who entered into this agreement of their own free will and with full knowledge of the contents thereof.
R. M. COMBE
Crown Advocate.
C. W. HOBLEY,
Provincial Commissioner, Ukamba.
JOHN AINSWORTH,
Provincial Commissioner, Nyanza.
C. R. W. LANE,
Provincial Commissioner, Naivasha.
S. L. HINDE,
Provincial Commissioner, Naivasha.
J. W. T. McLELLAN,
Provincial Commissioner, Kenya.
A. C. HOLLIS,
Secretary for Native Affairs.
C. C. BOWRING,
Treasurer and M.L.C.
Reprinted from East Africa Protectorate, Correspondence Relating to the Masai, Command Paper No. 20360. Received 28 March 1910, House of Commons Parliamentary Papers, 1911 Volume LII pp., 719-722

Judgement of the High Court Of The East Africa Protectorate in the Case brought by the Masai Tribe against the Attorney General of the Protectorate and Others; Dated 26th May, 1913.
Presented to both Houses of Parliament by Command of His Majesty.
July 1913.
In His Majesty’s Court at Mombasa
East Africa Protectorate
Civil Case No. 91 of 1912.
Ol le Njogo and 7 others…………..........……………..Plaintiffs,
The Honourable the Attorney-General and 20 others...Defendants.
JUDGEMENT
The action having been set down for argument on a preliminary point of law only on the issue of jurisdiction as raised on the pleadings by the Attorney-General, the only question that I have now to decide is whether the claims of the plaintiffs are recognisable by this court.
Mr. Home (Forester v. Secretary of State 1. A., 1872, p. 10; Musgrave v. Pulido, 5 App. Cases, p. 102) has argued on their behalf that it is not sufficient for the government merely to plead "Act of State," but that it is incumbent on the court to scrutinise those acts which are alleged to be Acts of State so as to be able to decide whether they in fact are or are not Acts of State, and that for this purpose it will be necessary to take evidence generally; and particularly, on the point of the alleged fiduciary relationship between the Secretary of State and the Masai tribe, he wishes to put in evidence speeches in the House of Commons.
I agree that the court must satisfy itself as to the real nature of the acts which are claimed to be Acts of State, but here all the facts relied on are fully set out by the defendants in the pleadings, so that, in my view, the court is in a position to form an opinion regarding their true nature without the necessity of taking evidence generally, or considering speeches in the House of Commons, which do not create legal obligations.
Now, for the contention of the government to succeed it must be shown on the facts pleaded that the acts of which the plaintiffs complain are really such Acts of State as are not cognisable by any municipal court.
These facts are shortly as follows:-
In 1904 the then Commissioner of the Protectorate entered into an agreement with the Chief and certain representatives of the Masai tribe by which, inter alia, it was arranged that certain sections of the tribe should remove to a reserve at Laikipia. This removal took place and the tribe was consequently divided in two.
In 1911, the then Governor of the Protectorate entered into another agreement with the Chief, his regents, and certain representatives of that portion of the tribe living at Laikipia, by which it was arranged that the sections of the tribe which under the former agreement had removed to Laikipia should move south into one reserve with the remainder of the tribe.
Both of these agreements were made by the government acting on instructions from, and with the sanction of, the Secretary of State.
The Attorney-General contends that these agreements were in effect treaties while the plaintiffs prefer to call them agreements, though in their concise statement the 1904 agreement, on which they rely, is called by them a treaty. For the present I will call them agreements.
Now,. both these agreements were entered into by the representatives of the Crown in the East Africa Protectorate, in which the King exercises powers by virtue of the Foreign Jurisdiction Act, 1890, and for which with the advice of his Privy Council he ordered in 1902 that-
"The Commissioner shall administer the Government of East Africa in the name and on behalf of His Majesty, and shall do and execute in due manner all things that shall belong to his said command, and to the trust thereby reposed in him, according to the several powers and authorities granted or appointed to him by virtue of this Order and of his commission, and according to such instructions as may from time to time be given to him under His Majesty’s Sign Manual and Signet, or by Order of His Majesty in Council, or by His Majesty through a Secretary of State, and according to such laws as are or shall hereafter be in force in the Protectorate." (Order in Council 1902(3).)
The Commissioner therefore in 1904, and the Governor (with like powers) in 1911, were both consequently acting within their authority in entering into the agreements mentioned "on the instructions of His Majesty through a Secretary of State."
Now, the other parties to these agreements were persons whom the Commissioner and Governor, acting on behalf of the Crown, chose as representatives of the Masai tribe who with the Crown could enter into such agreements. The Masai tribe as living within the limits of the East Africa Protectorate are not subjects of the Crown, nor is East Africa British territory. But East Africa being a Protectorate in which the Crown has jurisdiction is in relation to the Crown a foreign country under its protection, and its native inhabitants are not subjects owing allegiance to the Crown but protected foreigners, who, in return for that protection, owe obedience.
For this view as to the status of a protectorate "which has never been acquired by settlement, or ceded to, or conquered, or annexed by His Majesty, or recognised by His Majesty as part of his dominions," and of the status of the native inhabitants thereof, 1 need only refer to the case of the King v. the Earl of Crewe (2 K. B., 1910, p. 577).
The real parties to these two agreements are therefore on one side the Crown, and on the other the Paramount Chief and leading representatives of a native tribe in a foreign country under the protection of the Crown.
The main matters which are the subject of the agreements are the areas which the protecting power of the country is to reserve for that tribe as apart and distinct from the subjects of the Crown living in the same country.
In my opinion there is here no legal contract as alleged between the Protectorate Government and the Masai signatories of the agreements, but the agreements are in fact treaties between the Crown and the representatives of the Masai, a foreign tribe living under its protection. I will now consider the plaintiffs’ claims and the acts of which they complain.
The plaintiffs claim as individuals and also on behalf of the Masai of Laikipia, and also on behalf of the Masai tribe generally, that the treaty made between the Masai and His Majesty’s late Commissioner, Sir Donald Stewart, in 1904, is still in force and effect, and that the obligations undertaken therein are still binding on His Majesty’s Government. The defendants Nos. 2-19 are brought on the record as signatories to the agreement made in 1911 whereby they agreed that they and the other Masai should leave Laikipia; these defendants having no authority to enter into such an agreement and such agreement being void except as regard the said defendants.
The first three plaintiffs and the other Masai of Laikipia have been and are being wrongfully removed from the Laikipia district in breach of the said agreement of 1904.
The plaintiffs therefore claim:
I. A declaration against the defendants Nos. 1, 20 and 21 that the plaintiff and the other Masai of Laikipia and the other members of the Masai tribe generally, with the exception of the defendants Nos. 2 to 19 inclusive, are still entitled to-
(a) The Laikipia district extended as aforesaid as equitable tenants in common in unbarable entail; and
(b) To an easement of road as aforesaid between the Northern and Southern Masai Reserves; and
(c) That the 1911 agreement is not binding on the plaintiffs and the other Masai of Laikipia and the other members of the Masai tribe generally with the exception of the defendants Nos. 2-19.
II To £5,000 damages against the 1st defendant for failing to provide the road as agreed in the 1904 agreement; and
III To an inquiry as to damages against the 1st, the 20th, and 21st defendants-
(a) arising from the death of stock occasioned by such stock being illegally removed from the Laikipia district;
(b) arising from the depreciation on the value of stock wrongfully removed from the said Laikipia district.
IV. All necessary accounts and inquiries and such further and other relief as the nature of the case may require.
V. As against the 20th and 21st defendants an injunction restraining them from preventing the return of the plaintiffs and their stock to the Laikipia district; and against them compelling any of the Laikipia Masai and their stock to move from the said Laikipia district.
VI. Costs.
The above reliefs with the exception of No. V are claimed against the Crown, and Nos. I, III and V also against the 20th and 21st defendants on the grounds that the government having by the 1904 agreement become trustees for the Masai, they failed to execute their trust, but entered into another agreement in 1911 contrary to the former one and derogatory to the interests of their castor qua trusts, and that the later agreement was obtained by duress, and is further not binding as it has not received the approval of the tribe, and that the losses they allege they have suffered are due to the government executing the terms of the second agreement in violation of the first, which still continued to exist.
Now, are the acts of defendants complained of by the plaintiffs Acts of State?
The answer to this is, in my opinion, contained in my finding that both the agreements are in fact treaties. For it follows from that finding that there was no such contractual relationship as alleged between the parties, and that in this action the plaintiffs are seeking by means of the court to enforce the provisions of a treaty. The Paramount Chief himself could not bring such an action, still less can his people (Feather v. Queen, 35 L. J. K. B., 208 and Buron v. Denman, 2 Excheq. 167).
As regards the plea of duress and the want of approval of the tribe to the second agreement, as affecting its validity, it is not within the competence of this court, having held the agreement to be a treaty, to consider its validity as affected either by the pourparlers before its signature or a want of authority on the part of the signatories.
As to the alleged losses incurred by the plaintiffs, they themselves plead that defendants 20 and 21 were the agents of the government acting in pursuance of the orders of the government or Secretary of State in carrying out the second agreement, which pleading is accepted by both of these defendants as their defence. Such an action as against them is founded on tort and will not lie, and their acts in carrying out the terms of a treaty having been on instructions from and adopted by the government are as much Acts of State as the treaty itself. Relief V claimed as against these defendants for similar reasons is not one that this court could grant as it would in its crudest form be an injunction to officers of the government to prevent them carrying out an Act of State.
The remaining defendants on the record are merely nominal as signatories to the 1911 agreement and no relief is claimed as against them.
I hold therefore on the issue before me that the acts of the defendants complained of by the plaintiffs are in fact Acts of State which are not cognisable by a municipal court.
The Crown, acting through its Commissioner, first made one treaty with the Masai, and subsequently acting through the Governor modified that treaty by another, and 1 cannot do better than adapt to the present case the concluding words of Lord Kingstown in giving judgement in the Privy Council in the case of Secretary of State for India v. K. B. Sahaba (XIII Moore 22): "It may have been just or unjust, politic or impolitic, beneficial or injurious, taken as a whole, to those whose interests are affected. These are considerations into which this court cannot enter. It is sufficient to say that even if a wrong has been done, it is a wrong for which no municipal court of justice can afford a remedy."

The action is dismissed with costs.
R. W. HAMILTON.
26 May, 1913.
---
Related news:
CCR-Kenya's Proposal To The Kenyan Negotiators
Rally Urges Canada to Help Restore Democracy in Kenya
Tiomin contract is manipulative, argues Reform Group
OR
My Share of Yala
OR
  • email Email to a friend
  • print Print version
  • Add to your del.icio.us del.icio.us
  • Digg this story Digg this

Post your comment comment Comments (0 posted)

Powered By Vivvo CMS