Official registration of the Mau Mau On 11 November 2003, the Kibaki government formally registered the Mau Mau movement, disregarding the colonial-era legislation that had outlawed the organisation and branded its members "terrorists". In his remarks during the handing over of the certificate, Vice President
Moody Awori regretted that it had taken 40 years for the group to be officially registered despite the sacrifices the Mau Mau had made for Kenya's independence.
The Dedan Kimathi statue The Kibaki government erected a 2.1 metre bronze statue titled Freedom Fighter Dedan Kimathi on a graphite plinth, in central
Nairobi. The statue is at the junction of Kimathi Street and Mama Ngina Street. Kimathi, clad in military regalia, holds a rifle in the right hand and a dagger in the left, the last weapons he held in his struggle. The foundation stone for the statue was laid by Vice President Awori on 11 December 2006 and the completed statue unveiled by President Kibaki on 18 February 2007 coinciding with the 50th anniversary of the day he was executed. In his remarks, Kibaki paid homage to Kimathi as a man who not only paid the ultimate price for Kenya's liberation but also inspired others to fight against oppression. The statue attracted praise from Kenyans as a long overdue recognition of the Mau Mau for their part in the struggle for independence. This was in marked contrast to the post-colonial norm of the
Jomo Kenyatta and
Daniel Arap Moi governments' regard of the Mau Mau as terrorists. On 12 September 2015, the British government unveiled a Mau Mau memorial statue in Nairobi's
Uhuru Park that it funded "as a symbol of reconciliation between the British government, the Mau Mau, and all those who suffered". This followed a June 2013 decision by Britain to compensate more than 5,000 Kenyans tortured and abused during the Mau Mau insurgency.
Nelson Mandela Kĩmathi was held in high regard by
anti-apartheid leader
Nelson Mandela. In July 1990, five months after his release from 27 years of imprisonment by South Africa's apartheid regime, Mandela visited Nairobi and requested to see Kimathi's grave and meet his widow Mũkami. Mandela's request was an embarrassing moment for the Moi administration, which had largely ignored Kĩmathi like Jomo Kenyatta's government before it. It was an awkward moment searching for her in the village where she and her family lived forgotten in poverty. Mandela's request was not met. During a public address at the
Kasarani Stadium in Nairobi before he left the country, Mandela stated his admiration for Kimathi,
Musa Mwariama,
Waruhiu Itote,
Kubu Kubu and other Mau Mau leaders who inspired his own struggle against injustice. It was only 15 years later in 2005, during his second visit to Kenya, that Mandela finally managed to meet Mukami as well as two of Kimathi's children. Mandela's respect for Kimathi by the early 1960s is also alluded to in
My Moment with a Legend by
Ronnie Kasrils, the former intelligence chief of the ANC's armed wing Umkhonto We Sizwe (MK) and defence minister in Mandela's government. • Kĩmathi Street, Nairobi, Kenya – One of the main roads in Nairobi's Central Business District and where there is a statue in his honor • Dedan Kĩmathii Road,
Lusaka, Zambia - Situated on this road is the Intercity Bus Terminus and ZCAS University. • Kĩmathi Avenue,
Kampala, Uganda • Dedan Kĩmathi Road,
Mombasa, Kenya • Kĩmathi Road, Nyeri Town, Kenya • Kĩmathi Road,
Nanyuki Town, Kenya • Dedan Kĩmathi Street,
Embalenhle,
Mpumalanga, South Africa • Dedan Kĩmathi Memorial High School, Nyeri, Kenya • Kĩmathi Crescent, Isamilo, Mwanza, Tanzania • Kĩmathi Avenue,
Eldoret, Kenya ==Popular culture and further reading==