I am amazed at how much Kenyans are talking about this. In fact, surprised.
1 - Britain pillaged and plundered Kenya, used its resources (and many other countries') to become an economic power house. It treated people brutally (http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2005/feb/05/featuresreviews.guardianreview6)
2 - Large tracts of prime land, in thousands of acres, are still occupied by British settlers while "the natives" are landless and frequently clash and slash over land. Some of these settlers run so called ranches or conservancies and shoot poor folk for "poaching" while they themselves were once the big white hunters - hunting for trophies and not for food. This happened at a similar conservancy...while talking about Africa, natives, conservancies, white settlers etc....this is a very good read by Binyavanga Wainaina -
http://www.granta.com/Ma...ite-about-Africa/Page-1 - he aptly portrays the true picture of Africa and resonates well with Prince William's statement to the effect that Kenya is like his second home....(insert expletive here!)
3 - Irony of ironies - his ex hosted him and his bride to be. One generation ago, his father also has an ex (Camilla) who ended up current. To make matters worse, the engagement ring belonged to Lady Di (RIP dear princess) and perhaps the apple may not fall too far from the tree this time around.
So, deprived of land, looted and raped, Kenya is all agog about this news. We want to leverage it to market Kenya as a glorious place - but we forget - its not the royals that make Kenya great. Its us. Its all of us.
Lets judge ourselves on our own merit. Let it be about Rudisha, Evans Wandongo (CNN Hero), the Sevens Rugby Team, the never disappointing 1-2-3 steeple chase team, etc...
We do not need anyone lording over us...that was supposed to end on December 12 1963....