Audio By Carbonatix
A white Kenyan aristocrat convicted of the manslaughter of a black poacher on his estate in 2006 has been sentenced to eight months in prison.
The judge told a packed High Court in Nairobi he had decided to give Thomas Cholmondeley a light sentence.
The Eton-educated 40-year-old has spent the last three years in jail.
Last week, the judge cut Cholmondeley's murder charge to manslaughter as he did not show "malice aforethought" in the shooting of Robert Njoya, 37.
The killing was the second time in just over a year that Cholmondeley had fatally shot a black man.
The case, involving the great-grandson of the third Baron Delamere, one of Kenya's first major white settlers more than a century ago, has attracted huge media attention.
The tall, besuited farmer showed no emotion as the sentence was read to a courtroom packed with foreign journalists, and relatives of both his and his victim's family.
Justice Muga Apondi told the court he had not taken into account the accused's offer to pay compensation to the dead man's family.
"There should not be one law for the rich and another for the poor," the judge said.
But he noted the accused had used his own car to take the man to hospital, after shooting him.
Protests in court
Mr Njoya had been hunting on Cholmondeley's 55,000-acre Soysambu ranch near Lake Naivasha in Kenya's Great Rift Valley, which teems with zebra, giraffes and other wildlife.
Correspondents say the case has touched on deep sensibilities in Kenya, where white people took vast swathes of the best agricultural land during British colonial rule until 1963, before the new Kenyan elite did exactly the same.
Acknowledging the tensions, Justice Apondi said: "This court understands the undercurrents, but I believe the executive is dealing with the issues of land and other inequalities," reported Reuters news agency.
He said the process had humbled the accused, so he wanted to deliver a light sentence, which is to start immediately, to let him reflect on his life.
After the sentence was read out, people started protesting in court and waving placards, one of which read: "The Butcher of Naivasha."
In 2005 Cholmondeley admitted shooting a Maasai ranger, but the case was dropped owing to insufficient evidence.
That decision provoked outrage and mass protests among the Maasai community.
The hedonistic lifestyle of the original Lord Delamere and other wealthy white settlers from central Kenya's "Happy Valley" set inspired a book and the 1987 film White Mischief.
Source: BBC
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
NADMO dismisses claims residents were not warned before Weija Dam spillage
1 hour -
Government begins payment of 2020 batch of nurses and midwives arrears
1 hour -
Controversial anti-LGBTQ bill presented to Parliament for second reading
1 hour -
Deloitte Partner urges clear, consistent policies to govern mining license renewals, local content
2 hours -
Xenophobic attacks: Ghana must pursue justice for victims beyond evacuation – Bosome Freho MP
2 hours -
BOPP positions sustainable agribusiness as investment frontier
2 hours -
Ga Mantse demands action against chiefs selling lands on waterways
2 hours -
South African Tourism condemns anti-immigrant attacks, reassures African travellers
2 hours -
APSU 2002 Year Group announces key leadership appointments for 97th anniversary hosting & BOLT Steering Committee
2 hours -
Government backs hybrid model for Ghana’s extractive sector, rejects move to shut out foreign investors
2 hours -
LMWG commends Heath Goldfields on 5-year community development plan for Prestea
2 hours -
Eswatini champions SiSwati stories in digital age at World Book Day 2026
3 hours -
Only weak men forgive cheating partner – Yul Edochie
3 hours -
Meta repeatedly snubs EU body over Facebook and Instagram user bans
3 hours -
Family wealth should be viewed as asset class for building transgenerational enterprises – Alex Dadey
3 hours