Exhibition traces China’s long links with Kenya, from Admiral Zheng He to belt and road

National museum in Nairobi celebrates 620th anniversary of Ming dynasty navigator’s voyages and 62 years of modern bilateral ties

More than six centuries ago, around eight decades before Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama, Chinese admiral Zheng He arrived on the eastern coast of Africa, commanding a vast fleet with more than 20,000 crew members.
The ships of the Ming dynasty endured powerful waves and crossed enormous distances during seven major maritime expeditions, reaching Southeast Asia, South Asia, West Asia, and eventually the eastern shores of Africa.

Despite these accomplishments, Zheng He is largely missing from Kenya’s history curriculum. To draw attention to these early connections with China, Beijing has been increasing financial support for archaeological work, DNA studies, and museum exhibitions.
By connecting China’s ancient Maritime Silk Road to its modern Belt and Road Initiative, Beijing seeks to emphasize historical relationships alongside present-day developments such as Kenya’s Standard Gauge Railway and the Lamu port.

The most recent example of this initiative is an exhibition at the National Museums of Kenya in Nairobi, marking both the 620th anniversary of Zheng He’s voyages and 62 years of the modern diplomatic relationship between the two nations.

Admiral Zheng He and his Ming dynasty fleet traversed vast distances on seven epic maritime expeditions.

At the exhibition’s opening on December 19, Chinese Ambassador to Kenya Guo Haiyan said that historic ports such as Mombasa and Malindi served as important stops for Zheng He, showing a long history of engagement grounded in cooperation rather than conquest.

ntestinal Parasites Infected Roman Soldiers at Vindolanda

CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND—A research team from the University of Cambridge and the University of Oxford examined sediment samples taken from third-century A.D. sewer drains at Vindolanda, a Roman fort near Hadrian’s Wall in northern England, according to a statement from the University of Cambridge. Despite the presence of shared latrines, Roman soldiers at the fort still faced serious health risks due to unsanitary conditions and polluted food and water supplies. Microscopic analysis revealed the presence of roundworm and whipworm eggs, while Giardia duodenalis was identified using ELISA testing, a technique in which antibodies bind to proteins produced by single-celled organisms. This marks the first recorded identification of the protozoan Giardia duodenalis in Roman Britain. “Although the Romans understood intestinal worms, their medical practitioners had few effective treatments to eliminate these parasites or relieve diarrhea, allowing infections to continue and worsen,” said Marissa Ledger of the University of Cambridge. “Such long-term infections likely weakened the soldiers and impaired their ability to perform their duties.” The original academic study can be found in the journal Parasitology.

China urged to sue over Japanese royal’s role in Unit 731 crimes

Emperor Hirohito should be held accountable, according to scholars who say the wartime ruler was shielded from prosecution by US policy

Chinese scholars argue that Japan’s late Emperor Hirohito should be held legally responsible under international law for the crimes committed by Unit 731, saying he authorised the notorious programme but avoided prosecution due to US policies after World War II.

Unit 731, a covert Japanese military operation based in northeastern China, carried out human experimentation, biological warfare, and caused the deaths of tens of thousands of civilians. According to Zhou Donghua, a professor of contemporary history at Hangzhou Normal University, the unit was established by an imperial decree issued in 1936.

Zhou stated that prior to Japan’s surrender, evidence of Unit 731’s crimes was deliberately destroyed on Hirohito’s orders. In a written statement to the South China Morning Post on December 14, Zhou said that ultimate responsibility for the unit’s atrocities could reasonably be placed on the emperor.

His remarks reflect a growing movement among Chinese legal and historical scholars who are pushing to have Unit 731 tried in an international court for crimes against humanity, with Hirohito—who ruled Japan from 1926 until his death in 1989—identified as a principal figure of responsibility.

In a study released this month, researcher Wang Xiaohua and colleagues from the Heilongjiang Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology contended that Unit 731’s operations amounted to a state-sponsored crime rather than isolated actions by individual personnel, meeting the criteria set out under the Nuremberg Code.

Wang added that Hirohito had ordered the expansion of Unit 731 and the relocation of its main headquarters to an area near Harbin.

Despite the scale of Japan’s biological warfare programme across Asia, Zhou noted that only 12 individuals were publicly prosecuted during the Khabarovsk trials.