Tuesday, June 25, 2024
Police Fire On Tax Protestors In Kenya
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June 25, 2024, 12:54 p.m. ET9 minutes ago
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Live Updates: Police Fire Arms Amid Tax Protests in Kenya; 5 Reported Killed
Demonstrators breached the Parliament to protest the passage of a bill that raises taxes. At least five people have been killed and more than 30 others were wounded, according to Amnesty International and several prominent civic organizations.
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Abdi Latif Dahir
Updated
June 25, 2024, 12:49 p.m. ET15 minutes ago
15 minutes ago
Abdi Latif DahirReporting from Nairobi, Kenya
Here’s the latest on the protests in Kenya.
Police fired tear gas and shots rang out Tuesday as thousands of demonstrators flooded the streets around Kenya’s Parliament in the capital, Nairobi, after lawmakers passed tax increases that critics say will make life onerous for millions.
At least five people have died from gunshot wounds and more than 30 others were wounded in clashes between protesters and police, according a joint statement by Amnesty International and several prominent Kenyan civic organizations. That could not be independently confirmed. A video posted to social media by the independent Kenya Human Rights Commission showed police firing as protesters marched toward them.
The Parliament building was breached and its main entrance was briefly on fire, and Kenya’s Red Cross said that its vehicles had been attacked and staff members injured.
The turmoil over the finance bill that includes the tax hikes has shaken Kenya, an East African economic powerhouse of 54 million people that has long been an anchor of stability in a tumultuous region. At least one person was killed and 200 others were injured in protests across the country last week, according to Amnesty.
The contentious bill was introduced by the government of President William Ruto in May to raise revenue and limit borrowing in an economy facing a heavy debt burden. But Kenyans have widely criticized the legislation, saying it adds punitive new taxes and raises others on a wide range of goods and services that would escalate living costs, and detractors have pointed to corruption and mismanagement of funds.
The president now has two weeks to sign the legislation into law or send it back to Parliament for further amendments.
Protesters draped in the Kenyan flag blew whistles and trumpets and chanted, “Ruto must go.” There were signs the protests were spreading beyond the capital, as protesters blocked streets with burning tires in Nakuru, a city some 100 miles from Nairobi.
Here’s what else to know:
The protests have been guided by younger people who have used social media platforms like TikTok and Instagram to initiate a leaderless movement that has galvanized the nation.
The internet watchdog group NetBlocks is reporting a major disruption to internet connectivity in Kenya. Kenya’s communications authority said Monday after days of protests that it had “no intention whatsoever” of shutting down internet traffic.
Before Tuesday’s protests, several activists who are prominent critics of the bill were abducted, according to the Law Society of Kenya. The abductors’ identities were not publicly known, but some were believed to be intelligence officers, said the Law Society’s president, Faith Odhiambo. Ms. Odhiambo later said that some of those abducted had been released.
CNN aired footage of the half sister of former President Barack Obama, Auma Obama, being tear-gassed as she was interviewed about her opposition to the bill.
The protests comes as an initial group of 400 Kenyan police officers was arriving in Haiti for help to stop the rampant gang violence that has upended the Caribbean nation, an effort largely organized by the Biden administration.
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Abdi Latif Dahir
June 25, 2024, 12:14 p.m. ET50 minutes ago
50 minutes ago
Abdi Latif DahirReporting from Nairobi, Kenya
At least five people have died from gunshot wounds and more than 30 others were wounded in clashes between protesters and police, a joint statement by Amnesty International and several prominent Kenyan civic organizations, including the Kenya Medical Association, the Law Society of Kenya and the Police Reforms Working Group Kenya.
Declan Walsh
June 25, 2024, 11:39 a.m. ET1 hour ago
1 hour ago
Declan WalshReporting from Nairobi, Kenya
In a joint statement, the ambassadors of 13 Western embassies in Kenya, including the United States, said they were “shocked” by the scenes around Kenya's Parliament on Tuesday. They said they were “deeply concerned” by allegations that some protesters had been abducted by the security forces and called for “restraint on all sides.”
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