At least 8 dead in Kenya protests against police brutality and poor
governance
[June 26, 2025]
By EVELYNE MUSAMBI
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — At least eight Kenyans died and more than 80
others were receiving specialized treatment Wednesday, with some
sustaining gunshot wounds, during countrywide protests against police
brutality and poor governance, human rights groups said.
The state-funded Kenya National Commission on Human Rights reported
monitoring countrywide demonstrations, leading to over 400 injuries and
more than 60 arrests during Wednesday’s protests spreading across 23 of
47 counties.
The protests were timed to mark the one-year anniversary of anti-tax
demonstrations in which 60 people were killed and 20 others remain
missing.
Parliament and the president’s office in Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, were
barricaded with razor wire, with all access roads blockaded by police.
Thousands of protesters clashed with police who hurled tear gas
canisters and fired rounds and wielded batons, leaving several people
injured.
The protests, which spread to major cities including Mombasa, Kisumu,
Nakuru and Nyahururu, morphed into calls for the president to resign
over poor governance.
During last year's protests, demonstrators stormed Parliament where
legislation to increase taxes was passed, burning part of the building
as lawmakers fled. Bodies lay in the streets, and medical workers and
watchdogs said police had opened fire. The military was deployed.
Kenyan youth remain unhappy with the current administration due to
corruption, rising cost of living and police brutality, and the recent
death of a blogger in custody. The close-range shooting of a civilian
during recent protests has exacerbated public anger.

President William Ruto on Wednesday urged protesters not to “destroy”
the country.
“We do not have another country to go to when things go wrong. It is our
responsibility to keep our country safe,” he said while attending a
burial in coastal Kenya as protesters charged towards his Nairobi
office.
Young Kenyans used social media to plan protests in remembrance of those
who died last year. The government spokesperson, Isaac Mwaura, on Monday
said there would be no protests, and that Wednesday was a “normal
working day.”
But businesses in Nairobi on Wednesday remained closed and police
limited the movement of vehicles into the central business district.
Hundreds of Kenyans were already on the streets early in the morning,
chanting anti-government slogans as police hurled tear gas canisters at
some of the crowds.
An Associated Press journalist witnessed a demonstrator being injured in
the mouth by a round fired by police toward a crowd. Another protester
was clobbered on the head by anti-riot police and was taken by medics in
an ambulance.
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A man is carried by protesters after being beaten by anti riot
police during a demonstration on the one-year anniversary of deadly
anti-tax demonstrations in downtown Nairobi, Kenya, Wednesday, June
25, 2025. (AP Photo/Brian Inganga)

Wangechi Kahuria, the executive director for the Independent
Medico-Legal Unit, an NGO that tracked killings during protests,
said that Kenyans should be “allowed to mourn and go back home.”
Police Inspector General Douglas Kanja on Tuesday said no
unauthorized persons would be allowed inside protected zones such as
Parliament and the statehouse.
A protester, Rose Murugi, said police were part of the problem,
adding, "We will say it boldly, we will say it courageously, police
brutality must end and Ruto must go.”
Another protester, Derrick Mwangi, 25, said “we are fed up as the
youth.”
“People are being abducted, people are being killed," he said. "The
police have started using force which is very bad at this rate.”
Local media on Wednesday published the names and photos of some of
those who died during last year’s protests. The headline of a major
newspaper, The Standard, read “A luta Continua," which means “The
struggle continues” in Portuguese. It was the slogan of rebels
during Mozambique's struggle for independence from colonial rule.
During the protests, the Communication Authority banned the live
coverage of demonstrations and switched off some of the free-to-air
television signals, drawing condemnation from human rights groups.
Political analyst Herman Manyora called the protesters “heroes” who
paid the ultimate price and should be remembered.
“The authorities should work with the demonstrators to ensure a good
commemoration,” he said.
Manyora, however, warned that the protesters remain unhappy with the
authorities because the “government has been intransigent and has
hardened the resolve of the young people to keep fighting.”
During last year’s protests, President Ruto dissolved the Cabinet
that had been accused of incompetence and corruption but kept most
of his previous ministers in his new Cabinet despite concerns.
A finance bill proposing high taxes that had been passed by
Parliament was withdrawn, but later in the year, more taxes were
introduced through legislative amendments.
President Ruto appointed opposition party members to the Cabinet
last year and in March he signed a political pact with his election
rival, opposition leader Raila Odinga.
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