by Dr. Eowyn |
The [British] National Archives (BNA) is an executive agency of the
government of the United Kingdom. Based in Kew in southwest London, the
BNA is the UK government’s official archive, containing 1,000 years of
history from Domesday Book to the present, with records from parchment
and paper scrolls to digital files and archived websites, including
Foreign Office and Colonial Office correspondence and files. The
collections held by the BNA can be searched using their online
catalogue. Entrance to the Archives is free.
On April 18, 2012, the BNA released the first batch of thousands of
“lost” colonial-era files believed to have been destroyed, including
files on Britain’s former colony of Kenya. Reporters at the UK’s The
Guardian were among the first who looked at some of the newly released
colonial files. They found that the name of Barack Obama (henceforth,
Obama Sr.), the father of the POS in the White House, is on the top of a
list of names revealed in a hitherto secret British colonial file of
Kenyans studying in the United States.
But it’s not just UK journalists who can access the British National
Archives; anyone can. In May 2012, someone conducted a search of the
Archives using the search term “Obama” and found that an unnamed son of
Obama Sr. was born in Kenya in 1961. Since the POS in the White House is
the only known son of Obama Sr. born after 1960 and before 1963 when
Kenya became officially independent from the UK, it is reasonable for us
to conclude that the POS is that unnamed son of Obama Sr. born in Kenya
in 1961. And in fact, the claimed birth date of the POS is August 4,
1961.
Barack Hussein Obama Sr. (l); Stanley Ann Dunham (r). For a couple
who supposedly married and had a child together, it is odd to say the
least that there is not a single photo of Obama and Dunham together.
Below are excerpts from Dan Crosby’s on-site report from Kew for The Daily Pen, “Obama’s Kenya Birth Records Discovered in British National Archives,” July 18, 2012:
Below are excerpts from Dan Crosby’s on-site report from Kew for The Daily Pen, “Obama’s Kenya Birth Records Discovered in British National Archives,” July 18, 2012:
Evidence discovered shows British Protectorate of East Africa
recorded Obama’s birth records before 1963 and sent returns of those
events to Britain’s Public Records Office and the Kew branch of British
National Archives. [...]
It now appears the worst fears of the U.S. Constitution’s framers
were well founded as investigators working on behalf of the ongoing
investigation into the Constitutional eligibility of Barack Obama have
found yet another lead in a growing mountain of evidence within the
public records section of the British National Archives indicating the
occurrence of at least four vital events registered to the name of
Barack Obama, taking place in the British Protectorate of East Africa
(Kenya) between 1953 and 1963, including the birth of two sons before
1963.
Recall, investigative journalists working for Breitbart.com have
already discovered biographical information published by Barack Obama’s
literary agent in which he claimed he was born in Kenya. Prior to
Obama’s ensconcement to the White House, many international stories also
stated that Obama was Kenyan-born as did members of Kenya’s legislative
assembly. Since then information on Obama’s ties has been curtailed by
government officials as the Obama administration has coincidentally paid
nearly $4 billion dollars for capital projects in Kenya.
Also, the presence of Obama’s mother, Ann Dunham, cannot be accounted
for from February, 1961, the alleged month of her marriage to Obama,
until three weeks after the birth of Obama II in August, 1961 when she
allegedly applied for college courses at the University of Washington.
Theories about her whereabouts have included that she participated in
the Air Lift America project as an exchange student and traveled to
Nairobi as one of many recent high school graduates (see AASF Report
1959-1961).
The record of birth of a second son prior to Kenyan independence is
significant because biographical information about Obama’s family
indicates Obama Sr. fathered only one other son prior to Obama II’s
birth.
The books containing hand written line records of vital events
attributed to Obama [Sr.] are contained in Series RG36 of the Family
Records section in the Kew branch of the BNA. The hand written line
records first discovered in 2009, indicate several events were
registered to the name Barack Obama (appears to be handwritten and
spelled “Burack” and “Biraq”) beginning in 1953 and include two births
recorded in 1958 and 1960, a marriage license registration in 1954 and a
birth in 1961. Barack Obama [Sr.] is said to have died in 1982 and had
married at least once more in Kenya and had at least one more child in
1968, but no record of these were found in the BNA because, according to
the Archives’ desk reference, the events occurred after Kenya achieved
independence from British colonial rule in 1963.
To date, Barack Obama II is the only known alleged son of Obama Sr.
born after 1960 and before the independence of Kenya became official in
1963.
A request for information from the BNA on the specification of birth
information contained in the series of thousands of logs indicates that
only vital events registered in Kenya’s Ministry of Health offices were
recorded in the registration returns and were placed in the National
Archives care before they reached 30 years old (the law was amended to
20 years after creation in 2010).
The line records do not specify the identity or names of the
children, only gender. However, the line records are associated with
index numbers of actual microfilm copies of certificates, licenses and
registration applications filed in the archives. According to
researchers, Obama [Sr.]’s line records were discovered in Series RG36,
reference books. Not surprisingly, when researchers specifically
requested access to the relevant microfilm for the Obama [Sr.] birth
registrations, they were told that the records were currently held under
an outdated “privileged access” status, meaning researchers were denied
access under Chapter 52, Sections 3 and 5 of the British Public Records
Act of 1958.
However, evidence shows these records were available for public
access before August of 2009, the approximate date of arrival of Hillary
Clinton in Great Britain during her trip to Africa that year.
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/information-management/access-to-public-records.pdf
[...] Government officials in Hawaii, including Governor Neil
Abercrombie, Lt. Governor Brian Schatz and former Hawaiian elections
official, Tim Adams have all indicated that they could find no original
record of Obama’s alleged birth in any hospital in Hawaii in the course
of their duties to verify his eligibility. The absence of verifiable
birth documentation was so apparent that Schatz, serving as the chairman
of the Democrat Party of Hawaii in 2008, refused to certify that Obama
was indeed constitutionally eligible to hold the office of presidentwhen
he submitted the Official Certification of Nomination of Obama. Schatz
deferred the responsibility to Nancy Pelosi and DNC, and then Chair of
the Hawaiian Elections Commission, Kevin Cronin. Cronin resigned
suddenly after controversy surrounding his decision began to strain his
relationship with the commission.
[...] Liars and abettors in media and government, drudging on behalf
of the Obama administration, have anchored their Alinsky-style ridicule
of those questioning Obama’s eligibility in a delusion that he must be
legitimate because his birth was announced in two Hawaiian newspapers.
[...] Hawaii has a long history of allocating foreign births to the
mother’s claimed Hawaiian residence regardless of the actual location of
the birth, which was in compliance with guidelines established by the
National Center for Health Statistics in order to accurately attribute
data from births with decadal Census figures. [...] The impact of
population figures on the Hawaii’s economy and agency resources was very
significant in 1961. The accuracy of the Census takes precedence over
the accuracy and veracity of vital statistics in the U.S. [...]
According to Dan Crosby, the specific sources of information
pertaining to births of Kenyan nationals under British jurisdiction can
be researched in the following BNA files (Courtesy: British National
Archives):
General Register Office
SERIES RG36
Registers and Returns of Births, Marriages and Deaths in the Protectorates etc of Africa and Asia
Legal status: Public Record(s)
Language: English
Creator names: General Register Office, 1836-1970
Covering Birth Registration dates: 1895-1965
Physical description: 15 volume(s)
Access conditions: Available in microform only
Held by: The National Archives, Kew
Scope and content: Notifications forwarded by officials responsible for civil registration under administrative ordinances in Nyasaland, Kenya, Somaliland, Uganda, Sudan, Palestine, Sarawak, Malaya, including Johore and Selangor, and British North Borneo, commencing at varying dates.
Publication note: Geoffrey Yeo ‘The British Overseas, A Guide to Records of Their Births, Baptisms, Marriages, Deaths and Burials Available in the United Kingdom’, London, 2nd edn, 1988.
Related material: Some earlier returns from the East African territories in the period during which they were under Foreign Office control are in the consular registers retained in the custody of the registrar general.
Place: Kenya, Africa (Territory Thereof): 1920 – 1963
Subjects: Birth: registration
SERIES RG36
Registers and Returns of Births, Marriages and Deaths in the Protectorates etc of Africa and Asia
Legal status: Public Record(s)
Language: English
Creator names: General Register Office, 1836-1970
Covering Birth Registration dates: 1895-1965
Physical description: 15 volume(s)
Access conditions: Available in microform only
Held by: The National Archives, Kew
Scope and content: Notifications forwarded by officials responsible for civil registration under administrative ordinances in Nyasaland, Kenya, Somaliland, Uganda, Sudan, Palestine, Sarawak, Malaya, including Johore and Selangor, and British North Borneo, commencing at varying dates.
Publication note: Geoffrey Yeo ‘The British Overseas, A Guide to Records of Their Births, Baptisms, Marriages, Deaths and Burials Available in the United Kingdom’, London, 2nd edn, 1988.
Related material: Some earlier returns from the East African territories in the period during which they were under Foreign Office control are in the consular registers retained in the custody of the registrar general.
Place: Kenya, Africa (Territory Thereof): 1920 – 1963
Subjects: Birth: registration
Source: http://thesteadydrip.blogspot.com/2013/05/son-was-born-to-obama-sr-in-1961-in.html
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