Racist treatment of black and Asian war dead is acknowledged at last | Letters
Readers respond to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission's report into the unequal commemoration of soldiers in the first world war
It is gratifying that the Commonwealth War Graves Commission will finally apologise, after 100 years, for denying black African soldiers and labourers war graves for their service to the British empire in the first world war (UK inquiry blames pervasive racism' for unequal commemoration of troops, 21 April). Many people in Britain and Europe will have seen headstones in cemeteries to colonial servicemen from the British West Indies Regiment, the South African Native Labour Corps, the Chinese Labour Corps, and Indians, alongside others, and will wonder what the fuss is. These troops were considered Christian and given the privilege of a headstone by the commission.
But on the African continent, where there was fighting in east and west Africa, you will not see any native African soldiers from the King's African Rifles, the West Africa Frontier Force and the Carrier Corps given a headstone, as they were considered heathen" and uncivilised". There should be at least 200,000 war graves to these men. It is important that the commission creates new headstones so that the racist construct that the war was a white man's war", where only white soldiers paid the ultimate price, can finally be laid to rest.
John Siblon
London