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British Army Training Unit Kenya


The British Army Training Unit Kenya (BATUK) is a training support unit of the British Army located in Kenya under long-standing cooperative agreements with that country.

The UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) maintains a longstanding Defence Cooperation Agreement with the Kenyan Government whereby up to six British infantry battalions (10,000 service personnel) per year may carry out four-week exercises in Kenya’s arid Great Rift Valley. The ruggedness of Terrain in Laikipia County is unavailable in the UK and therefore a unique opportunity for British soldiers to gain skills through training.

The exercises are run by the British Army Training Unit Kenya based at Kifaru Camp in Nairobi, and Nanyuki Showground Camp (NSC), 200 km north of the capital. In addition three Royal Engineers squadrons carry out civil engineering projects, while two medical company group deployments provide primary health care assistance to the civilian community. Britain also offers substantial training opportunities in the UK to members of the Kenyan Military and conducts joint exercises with the Kenya Defence Forces. From 2015 the UK will also offer greater support for Kenya's struggle against Al Shabaab, including the deployment of British personnel to Somalia to offer the Kenyan Defence Forces logistical support, and contributions towards anti-terrorism training for the Kenya Police and border guards.

British Army training in Kenya became part of a broader series of diplomatic disputes between the UK and Kenya in 2013-2015. While the Defence Cooperation agreement between the UK and Kenya required British Troops to abide by Kenyan Law, the British Army prefers to try soldiers under UK military law. Whilst British Soldiers were subject to Kenyan Law, they therefore existed in something of a legal grey area. The Kenyan Government contends that British Troops may have been involved in unsolved serious violent crimes in Nanyuki. Moreover British Bases and Military shipping were not subject to except from by all Kenyan Authorities. These two disputes resulted in a confrontation in 2013. Laikipia County is plagued by lawlessness and British Military equipment has often been subject to large-scale theft during exercises. A confrontation ensued a group of heavily armed men apparently intent banditry were spotted infringing on a military training area during and exercise during which Sergeant Bryan George Maddison a member of the BATUK training team shot and killed one of the 12 armed intruders in self defence. Whilst the Nanyuki police stated Maddison had acted reasonably, some Kenyan local politicians and the Kenyan Attorney General called for Maddison to be tried in Kenya. Maddison was detained in Kenya and the dispute faded. In response Britain apparently investigated alternative training opportunities in Tanzania and Djibouti sparking concern British withdrawal would result in very significant economic damage in and the loss of free medical services provided by the British Ministry of Defence.


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