Rawson Macharia

Rawson Mbugua Macharia (b. 1911, d. December 5, 2008, aged 96 [1]) was the key prosecution witness at the trial of the Kapenguria Six, Kenyan nationalists amongst whom Jomo Kenyatta was prominent. Others were Bildad Kaggia, Kung'u Karumba, Fred Kubai, Paul Ngei, Achieng Oneko.

The Six were arrested in 1952, and tried in 1952-53 for the offence of managing Mau Mau, then a proscribed society.

Macharia testified that in March 1950, he had taken one of the Mau Mau oaths at Kenyatta's hands. He further claimed that the oath-taking involved stripping naked and drinking human blood. [2] Macharia's submissions were the only evidence of a direct link between Kenyatta and Mau Mau produced before the court. Mau Mau was proscribed in August 1950, so, even had the claims been true, it is unclear that they proved Kenyatta's membership, let alone management, of a proscribed organisation.

In 1958, Macharia swore an affidavit to the effect that he and six others had perjured themselves at the trial. The prosecution witnesses, he claimed, had been coached, and some of them were rewarded with plots of land at the Coast. He had himself been offered a university course in public administration at Exeter University College, protection for his family, and a government job on his return from the UK [3] The affidavit was backed by a letter, apparently from the Attorney-General at the time of the trial, detailing the promised benefits (See the Time report).

The affidavit led to a trial at which it was conceded by the government that the witnesses had been coached (to better enable them to stand up to hostile cross-examination), that they had been paid (as compensation for loss of livelihood), and that Macharia had both lied at the trial and received the claimed benefits.[4]

Macharia was later to write a book: The Truth about the Trial of Jomo Kenyatta.

Macharia died after being hit by a motorcycle while crossing Thika Road on December 5th 2008.[5]

He was married to Edith Mwihaki, who died in 1999. His home village was Muthurumbi in Thika District, near Gatundu town. His home was located only five kilometres from Kenyatta's home [1].

Notes

  1. ^ a b The Standard, December 11, 2008: Curtain comes down on man who lied against Kenyatta
  2. ^ See p. 1 of The Roots of the Fig Tree
  3. ^ See Lonsdale 2000: 235
  4. ^ See Lonsdale 2000: 235-6
  5. ^ Man who gave false testimony against Kenyatta dies in crash

Bibliography