Jump to navigation

Kenya

Ruto faces escalating crisis as many shot in Gen Z’s mass protests against tax hikes

Ministers could impose curfews in big towns and cities as citizens report disruption to internet and phone services

At least five people have been shot, including a journalist, amid mass protests around parliament in Nairobi in what is turning into a rapidly escalating crisis for President William Ruto’s government. The protestors were trying to stop MPs voting in support of a revised version of the Finance Bill. One report claimed that the protestors had entered the parliament and taken the Mace – which on paper should force the chamber to shut down.

At the heart of the protests is the mass opposition to yet another round of tax hikes in the latest Finance Bill, a desperate attempt by the Treasury to balance the budget without borrowing more money or further cutting back social services.

Before today’s clashes in Nairobi, President Ruto had indicated his willingness to engage in dialogue with the youth movement that has led a week of sustained protest against his government’s controversial Finance Bill.

Government ministers appear divided on how to respond to the protests. There have also been claims of mobile and internet disruption in Nairobi, while ministers have also been mulling whether to introduce curfews in major towns and cities.

Human rights organisations say that two young protesters have been killed by the police, while at least 200 were injured. There have also been multiple arrests of activists, journalists and opposition politicians, and reports of protest leaders being kidnapped.

Last week, late government concessions, including the scrapping of a motor vehicle tax and VAT on bread, failed to quell protests that began in Nairobi on 18 June under the ‘Occupy Parliament’ banner mobilised by Generation Z (Gen Z) and human rights activists largely on social media platforms (AC Vol 65 No 13, A fragile recovery).

Organised with little help from politicians or political parties, the protests are by a generation previously perceived as apolitical, indifferent and passive. They pose a potential threat not only to the Ruto government’s Finance Bill, which seeks to impose a series of new taxes in a bid to meet its debt repayment obligations and satisfy the International Monetary Fund, but also to his presidency. The protestors are demanding that the bill be scrapped in its entirety.

On Sunday, young activists sought to prevent politicians who support the bill from speaking in churches. At midnight the night before, DJs in bars and clubs across the country had been urged – with some success – to pause their music to lead anti-Ruto chants demanding the repeal of the bill.



Related Articles

A fragile recovery

The region’s economies boast healthy growth rates but weak currencies, debt distress and unpopular taxes threaten

Finance ministers in East Africa’s leading economies – Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda – kept to the tradition of releasing their budget plans for 2024/25 on 13 June.


A deluge of injustice

A new investigation says those responsible for the Solai dam disaster could escape prosecution

Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) Noordin Mohamed Haj has charged the manager and owner of the Nakuru County farm on which the Milmet Solai dam collapsed, causing dozens...


The new flagbearers

As the governing National Rainbow Coalition (Narc) quarrels over internal elections, Kenya's alliance system is becoming increasingly fluid and a new set of leaders is jockeying for position...


Another dam under fire

The Gibe III dam on the Omo River may threaten Lake Turkana and those who depend on it

A new report claims that Ethiopia’s Gibe III dam on the Omo river could lower water levels in Lake Turkana, in Kenya’s remote and arid northwest, by as...


A reform deadline for the rivals

A year after the power-sharing accord, political change is faltering and the police are shooting human rights activists

Politicians gathering in Nairobi and Geneva this week candidly admit that time is fast running out for the Grand Coalition to implement its promised reforms, without which Kenya...