Kenyans have written to Prince William to protest land evictions.

He claimed that he had been denied a meeting with officials from the UK's Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office this week and that he had been given no opportunity to fix the issue.

Kenyans have written to Prince William to protest land evictions.

A group of Kenyans has asked Prince William for assistance in obtaining restitution for what they claim are human rights violations and land theft committed during British colonial rule.

They also want the UK government to apologize.

People from the Talai and Kipsigis clans in Kenya's western Kericho county make up the group.

Lawyer Joel Kimutai Bosek wrote to the Duke of Cambridge, claiming that the UK government had refused to interact with the victims and their advocates.

He claimed that he had been denied a meeting with officials from the UK's Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office this week and that he had been given no opportunity to fix the issue.

Six UN special rapporteurs wrote to the UK government last year, expressing concern about the government's failure to provide "effective remedies and reparations" to the two clans who were forcibly evicted from their farms by the British army between the late 1800s and the mid-1960s to make way for white settlers' tea plantations.

The UK government responded by saying that it "made a settlement in the Mau Mau emergency case of 1952-1963" in 2013 and that it "does not need to give any further apology or recompense."

The organization has requested Prince William to respond quickly to their plea as he prepares to celebrate his grandmother's Platinum Jubilee, which honors Queen Elizabeth II's 70-year reign.

“Our elderly family members remember the pain of having their homes and land taken away from them at the same time. We have very little to celebrate.”