Thousands of confidential papers were destroyed as British rule neared its end in many colonies
By Cahal Milmo
The Guardian - November 29, 2013
In April 1957, five unmarked lorries left the
British High Commission in Kuala Lumpur and drove to a Royal Navy base
in Singapore with their cargo of files detailing the secrets of
Britain’s rule in Malaya. Their destination was, in the words of one
official, a “splendid incinerator”.
This “discreet” mission in the closing days of British rule over what
became Malaysia was one of hundreds of similar operations. As the sun
finally set on the Empire, diplomats scurried to repatriate or destroy
hundreds of thousands “dirty” documents containing evidence that London
had decided should never see the light of day. Some 50 years later, the
sheer scale of the operation to hide the secrets of British rule
overseas – including details of atrocities committed during the Mau Mau
rebellion in Kenya – is revealed in documents released today by the
National Archives in Kew, west London.
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