[EN IMAGES] Kenya protests: 22 people killed in Tuesday’s chaos

[EN IMAGES] Kenya protests: 22 people killed in Tuesday’s chaos
[EN IMAGES] Kenya protests: 22 people killed in Tuesday’s chaos

Twenty-two people were killed in Kenya during anti-government protests which turned into chaos on Tuesday, the chairwoman of the official human rights body, the Kenya National Human Rights Commission (KNHRC), told AFP on Wednesday.

• Read also: [EN IMAGES] Chaos in Kenya: fire, shooting and at least 5 dead in Nairobi

• Read also: Kenya: Six people killed in protests

“We followed these demonstrations” and “recorded 22 deaths,” declared Roseline Odede, affirming that her organization, public but independent of power, had “opened an investigation”. A previous report given by an association of doctors had reported at least 13 deaths.

Kenya woke up in a state of shock on Wednesday the day after the violence, which notably saw demonstrators storm Parliament, a first in the history of the independent country since 1963.



AFP

“Deaths, disorder”, headlined the daily The Standardwhile the Daily Nation described the situation as “Pandemonium” (capital of hell, editor’s note), estimating that “the foundations of the country have been deeply shaken”, with several deaths and scenes of chaos in the center of the capital Nairobi.

The rallies, led mainly by young people, began peacefully last week, with thousands of protesters marching in Nairobi and other cities across the country to protest new taxes included in the 2024-25 budget currently being debated in parliament.

On Tuesday, while opponents demonstrated for the third time in eight days, tension suddenly rose in the afternoon in Nairobi.



AFP

According to NGOs, including the Kenyan branch of Amnesty International, the police fired live ammunition to try to contain the crowd, which forced security barriers to enter the Parliament grounds. Buildings were ransacked and partially burned.

Looting took place in Nairobi and several towns. Buildings were burned in Eldoret, in the Rift Valley, the stronghold of President William Ruto.

A few hours later, the government announced that it was deploying the army to support the police in the face of this “security emergency” and these “destructions and intrusions into crucial infrastructure.”



AFP

In the evening, President Ruto displayed his firmness by committing to firmly repress “violence and anarchy”, promising in particular to make pay these “criminals posing as peaceful demonstrators” who are causing “a reign of terror against the people, their elected representatives and institutions.

Looting

The government was taken by surprise by the intensity of the opposition to its plans for tax increases, mainly led by young Kenyans from “Generation Z” (young people born after 1997).

On Wednesday morning, a strong police presence was deployed around parliament, where the scent of tear gas was still in the air, AFP noted.



AFP

Posted in front of the broken barricades of the complex, a police officer explained to AFP that he was shocked by what he saw the day before on television. “It was crazy, we hope that calm will return today,” he said.

The main opposition coalition, Azimio, led by historic opponent Raila Odinga, accused the government of having “unleashed its brute force” against the demonstrators and urged the police to “stop shooting innocent, peaceful and unarmed.”



AFP

The group of NGOs led by Amnesty Kenya also highlighted on Tuesday having noted 21 kidnappings of people by “officers in uniform or in plain clothes” during the previous 24 hours, accusations on which the police, requested by the AFP, did not didn’t react.

International concern

The violence and scenes of chaos in Nairobi on Tuesday alarmed the United States and more than a dozen European countries, as well as the UN and the African Union, which declared themselves “strongly concerned” by the violence and called quiet.

The protest movement against taxes, called “Occupy Parliament”, was launched on social networks shortly after the presentation to Parliament on June 13 of the 2024-2025 draft budget providing in particular for a 16% VAT. on bread and an annual tax of 2.5% on private vehicles.

After the start of protests, the government, which considers new taxes necessary in view of the country’s heavy debt, announced on June 18 that it was withdrawing most of the measures planned for this purpose.

But the demonstrators demand the complete withdrawal of the text.

Before Tuesday’s demonstration, the protests had already seen the deaths of two people in Nairobi, as well as dozens of injured and hundreds of arrests.

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