Crimes Against Humanity: The British EmpireIt was the largest empire ever to have existed. And as the saying used to go, the sun never sets on the British Empire.
At its height in 1922, the colonial power was lording it over a fifth of the world’s population and for many of them, the sun never rose again.
Under the policies of British colonialism, people around the globe were subjected to mass famines, atrocious conditions in
concentration camps, and brutal massacres at the hands of imperialist troops. The Brits also
played an integral role in the
transatlantic slave trade.
Although the atrocities of the British Empire are well documented, the myth of the noble colonising power continued into recent decades.
In 1964, the colonial army began erecting a network of concentration camps. Historians estimate that
150,000 to
1.5 million Kikuyu people were detained. Conditions within the camps were atrocious, and people were systematically beaten and sexually assaulted during questioning.Under slogans like “labor and freedom” and other variations on ”
Arbeit macht frei,” inmates were worked to death as slave labor filling in mass graves. Random executions were not-uncommon and the use of torture was widespread. Men were anally raped with knives. Women had their breasts mutilated and cut off. Eyes were gouged out and ears cut off and skin lacerated with coiled barbed wire. People were castrated with pliers then sodomized by guards. Interrogation involved stuffing a detainee’s mouth with mud and
stamping on his throat until he passed out or died. Survivors were sometimes burned alive.
India suffered around a dozen major famines
under British rule, with an estimated
12 to 29 million Indians starving to death.
Dozens of massacres of Indigenous people were carried out by the British right up until the 1920s. On June 10 1838, the
Myall Creek massacre occurred near Inverell in NSW. This tragedy is well-known as it was the first time Europeans were brought to justice for such an atrocity in Australia.
There were the
concentration camps in South Africa, where tens of thousands of the Boer population were detained in the first years of the 20
th century. The Irish potato famine occurred
in the 1840s, leading to the deaths of well over a million people.
There were the
torture centres in Aden
in the 1960s, where nationalists were kept naked in refrigerated cells. When the Empire was facing communist insurgents during the Malaya Emergency of
the 1950s, they simply decided to imprison the entire peasant population in detention camps.
And the list goes on…
https://www.sydneycriminallawyers.com.au/blog/crimes-against-humanity-the-british-empire/At 4.30pm, troops blocked the exits to the Garden and opened fire on the crowd. They kept firing until they ran out of ammunition. In the space of ten minutes, they and injured another 1,100. A stampede caused a lethal crush by the blocked exits. Over 100 women and children who looked for safety in a well
drowned. Rifle fire tore the rest to shreds.
Between 1955 and 1959, the British responded to a Cyrpus rebel bombing campaign by
rounding up and torturing 3,000 ordinary Cypriots.
The victims of this internment campaign were often held for years without trial and violently abused for being “suspected” terrorists. Detainees received regular beatings, waterboarding, and summary executions. Children as young as 15 had burning
hot peppers rubbed in their eyeballs, while others reported being flogged with whips embedded with shards of iron. Those found guilty of rebel sympathies were relocated to London, where a UK opposition party inspection found inmates with their arms broken and jagged scars running across their necks. In short, it was an appallingly sadistic policy, one that showed the British to be even lower than the terrorists they were meant to be fighting.
Fed up with their imperial overlords, the Iraqis turned to revolution, only for the British to unleash wave after wave of atrocities against them.
First the RAF conducted nighttime bombing raids on civilian targets. Then they deployed chemical weapons against the fighters, gassing whole groups of them. But the real horrors came in the aftermath, when the victorious British decided to use collective punishment against the offending tribes.
From that point on, any tribe that caused a fuss would have one of its villages randomly annihilated. Specific orders were given to
exterminate every living thingwithin its walls, from animals to rebels to children.
As a servant of the British Empire in 1947, Cyril Radcliffe has the distinction of killing more people with the stroke of a pen than anyone else in history. With almost zero time to prepare himself, Radcliffe was tasked with drawing the border between India and newly-created Pakistan that would split the subcontine
https://listverse.com/2014/02/04/10-evil-crimes-of-the-british-empire/nt forever along religious lines.
If you want to see why large parts of Ireland still despise anything remotely British, look no further than the Irish Famine. What started out as an ordinary if brutal famine soon became something more like genocide when London sent the psychopathic Charles Trevelyan to oversee relief work.