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Can Kenyan youth protests spark real police reform one year on?

Can Kenyan youth protests spark real police reform one year on?

Yahoo3 days ago

One year after major protests against corruption, Kenyans are holding remembrance marches for victims of police violence. Renewed demonstrations follow the death of a teacher in custody. RFI spoke to a policy analyst on whether youth protests can drive real reform.
In 2024, widespread protests erupted across Kenya in response to a proposed bill that sought a significant increase in taxes, culminating on 25 June. These demonstrations were met with a forceful and violent response from the police.
At least 60 people were killed during protests in June and July 2024, and dozens more were illegally detained by security forces in the aftermath.
This year, the country's youth are back on the streets protesting against that violence.
Although the government had called for calm since last summer, the death of Albert Ojwang in police custody - arrested for publishing a blog post criticising a police officer - sparked a new wave of protests in early June this year.
Douglas Kivoi, a policy analyst at the Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA), told RFI that he was not surprised by the events, as they reflect the typical conduct of police officers in the country.
Kivoi has been studying the role and behaviour of the police in Kenya for many years.
"They are used in settling political scores and silencing any dissent that the powers are not comfortable with. So that is just one of the few that made it to the public domain. Many of those cases hardly make it to the media. If the family keeps quiet or is threatened with dire consequences," he told RFI.
Read more on RFI EnglishRead also:Violence erupts in Kenya as 'goons' attack protesters over death in police custodyKenya protests reignited by custody death, but 'Gen Z' movement remains dividedSilencing dissent in Tanzania, reckoning with genocide in Namibia

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East African Countries Face Broad Crackdown on Political Dissent
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East African Countries Face Broad Crackdown on Political Dissent

When thousands of young Kenyans converged across the nation this week to mark a year since scores of them were killed in protests, police were ready and opened fire, leaving at least 16 dead. It was the latest sign of a broad crackdown on dissent across East Africa, where activists, protesters and opposition politicians from Tanzania to Uganda have been arrested, abducted, tortured or even killed to silence criticism.

Are East African governments uniting to silence dissent?
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Are East African governments uniting to silence dissent?

Kenya has been hit by a recent wave of repression, tarnishing its reputation as a beacon of democracy in East Africa. Critics fear that it is sliding down the path of her neighbours - Uganda and Tanzania, both of which are notorious for cracking down on dissent. Kenya's laws are widely regarded as being more progressive - particularly in protecting fundamental freedoms like the right to protest. But Kenya has witnessed an increasing crackdown on protests - the latest example being the killing of at least 10 people in nationwide demonstrations against President William Ruto's government while it attempted to ban live TV and radio coverage of the protests. 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Ms Tsehai is a staunch critic of Tanzania's President Samia Suluhu Hassan, and has accused her government of bringing "tyranny back" to the country, despite promising reforms when she took office in 2021 following the death of her authoritarian predecessor, John Magufuli. Karua said that despite the "backsliding" of democracy and human rights in East Africa, there was little concern about this internationally, with the African Union "silent", the United Nations offering "rhetoric - not redress", while the US - "a self-declared champion of liberty" - was facing its "own issues of liberty" under the administration of President Donald Trump. Tanzania deported Karua and two Kenyan activists when they flew into the country in May to show solidarity with Lissu, while Kenyan activist Boniface Mwangi and Ugandan lawyer Agather Atuhaire were detained after being allowed to enter. Following their release, both accused the Tanzanian police of sexually abusing them. 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Death toll from Kenya's anti-government protests rises to 16
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Death toll from Kenya's anti-government protests rises to 16

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