Jump to navigation

Kenya

Ruto loyalists plot new laws to stifle protests

A new bill could give police sweeping powers to ban or break up demonstrations and impose harsh fines and jail terms

Legislators are pressing ahead with new laws aimed at giving the police powers to break up demonstrations just weeks after the Generation Z protest movement swept across Kenya.

A bill by Geoffrey Ruku, an MP in President William Ruto’s Kenya Kwanza, would give the police sweeping powers to ban or break up protests and impose harsh fines or a jail term for offending demonstrators.

It would also require organisers of protests to give the police three days’ notice in order to get permission and for demonstrators to keep to specified routes.

Ruku’s private member’s bill will sit alongside the government’s own planned revisions to the Public Order Act which were set out by interior minister Kithure Kindiki during the vetting process by MPs on 1 August.

Kindiki insists that his plans will ‘designate public institutions in all arms of the government to designate areas in their precincts or in the vicinity of their precincts where a group of protesters who want to demonstrate or present a petition to that public institution can assemble.’

However, while Kindiki and others deny having any sinister intentions, the timing of the bill – as well as its contents – points to another worrying crackdown on the constitutional right to protest.

Kindiki survived in his post despite being held responsible by protestors for the death of dozens of demonstrators at the hands of the police, as well as an unknown number of cases of abduction, detention and torture by law enforcement authorities.

Despite some international pressure from the United States, the government has made no attempt to address the endemic brutality in Kenya’s National Police Force, or its culture of impunity. The Independent Policing Oversight Authority has little political backing and averages roughly one conviction for police violence per 2,000 complaints (AC Vol 65 No 15, Ruto struggles to regain control).



Related Articles

Ruto struggles to regain control

Weeks of protests sparked by punitive tax hikes have morphed into a wider revolt, pushing the President on the defensive

The sense of chaos coming from State House in Nairobi is palpable. Having fired his government and accepted the resignation of Inspector General of Police Japhet Koome, President...


Going down with the ship

Finance Minister David Mwiraria is the first domino to fall as the government faces a growing anti-corruption backlash

The momentum behind the anti-corruption drive, sparked by press reports of a dossier of investigations into more than US$1 billion of fraudulent government procurement deals, now looks unstoppable....


The Kenyatta-Odinga deal starts fraying

As the Building Bridges Initiative stalls, politicians are readying for a battle over the top jobs

The Building Bridges Initiative – the political deal concocted between opposition leader Raila Odinga and President Uhuru Kenyatta – is in trouble again. Enough trouble to merit requiring...


How the case was won

The government’s obstruction of the ICC and intimidation of witnesses fatally undermined the Kenyatta prosecution

Ultimately, it was a combination of failings by the International Criminal Court prosecutors and the government's non-cooperation that resulted in the dropping of the case against President Uhuru...


The President's anger

Kenyatta’s frustration with the slowness of change is visible as he looks to his legacy and Ruto ponders the next election

For a leader who has tamed the political ambitions of the main opposition party and brought it to support his government's national unity and development agenda, President Uhuru...