Charles Mugane Njonjo (born 23 January 1920) is a former Attorney General of Kenya (1963 – 1979), and Minister of Constitutional Affairs (1980 – 1983). Charles Njonjo is also popularly referred to as "The Duke of Kabeteshire".
Njonjo was the son of Josiah Njonjo, a colonial paramount chief and one of the foremost collaborators of British rule in Kenya. The Njonjo family were close friends of Harry Leakey, whose son (Louis) and grandson (Richard) would later play important roles in archaeology and kenyan politics. As the son of a collaborator, Njonjo led a pampered lifestyle, later remarking how he would ride to school on a horse delivered by a servant, at a time when Africans were under a sustained assault on their way of life by the colonial government. After completing his secondary education at Alliance High School in Kikuyu, Njonjo enrolled at Fort Hare University in South Africa, where he graduated with a Bachelor's Degree in Law. He returned to Kenya and was appointed a legal clerk in the colonial government in 1955, having completed a Law degree at Lincoln's Inn in the United Kingdom. This was at the height of the state of Emergency, which had been declared in order to defeat the attempts of Mau Mau freedom fighters to gain independence. Njonjo diligently served the government as it went about performing horrendous atrocities, gaining a reputation as a diligent lawyer, and therefore being considered for Attorney General in the Independent Kenya. With Njonjo at the helm of the judiciary and other legal apparatus in Kenya, the government policy on dispossession of Africans by White colonialists surprisingly continued unabated. In view of the illegal actions of the British in quelling the Mau Mau uprising, and other liberation movements, Njonjo and the government he served in did not institute any measures to address the injustice, instead taking an active role of thwarting any such attempts. it was only 50 years later that the Kenyan government finally outlawed Mau Mau and joined their quest for compensation by the British government. He was also a proponent for continued ties with regimes such as White - ruled Rhodesia, apartheid South Africa and Portuguese Mozambique, at a time when other African countries stood shoulder to shoulder with their oppressed comrades in their quest for independence and an end to racially - inspired rule. These actions have defined the frosty South Africa - Kenyan relations since then. On Kenyan politics, Njonjo always had designs for the top job of president. while he had registered the G.e.m.a. association, he would soon become an opponent of the group, when he viewed them as a threat to his plans. His plan was to have the then vice president, Daniel Moi, succeed Kenyatta. Feeling that Moi would be weak, he could easily dislodge him from the presidency and become president himself. To destroy GEMA, in 1976, he charged some of its members including Kihika Kimani and Njenga Karume with treason. The order was soon overturned, however, by the president, Jomo Kenyatta.