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Radio France Internationale
Radio France Internationale
World
RFI

Kenya probes deadly violence that erupted during tax hike protests

People run after police use water cannon to disperse protesters during a demonstration against Kenya's proposed finance bill in Nairobi on 20 June, 2024. © Monicah Mwangi / Reuters

Kenyan police are to investigate violence that broke out on Thursday during protests against planned tax hikes. One person was killed and 100 people arrested, with rights groups accusing security forces of using live rounds to quell the rallies.

Some 200 people were injured in the nationwide protests against government plans to raise $2.7 billion in additional taxes.

Thousands of mostly young people took to the streets of the capital Nairobi and elsewhere to pressure the government to abandon the proposals.

Police fired tear gas and water cannon to disperse protesters in Nairobi, five rights groups, including Amnesty International and the Kenya Medical Association, said in a joint statement.

The presence of spent cartridges implied the use of live rounds, they said.

An unidentified person died at Bliss Hospital from a gunshot wound to his thigh sustained during the protest, the Daily Nation newspaper reported.

The Independent Police Oversight Authority, a state body that oversees police operations, on Friday said it had documented the death of a man "allegedly as a result of police shooting".

Several serious injuries had been suffered by other demonstrators, including police officers, it added, announcing that an investigation had been launched.

Contested tax proposals

The new taxes would include a 2.75 percent levy on income for the national medical insurance plan, along with increased taxes on vegetable oil and fuel.

Protesters are calling for the bill to be scrapped, saying it will choke the economy and raise the cost of living for Kenyans who are already struggling to make ends meet.

The International Monetary Fund, however, says that the government needs to increase revenues to reduce the budget deficit and state borrowing.

Earlier this week the government softened its position a little, with President William Ruto endorsing recommendations to scrap some of the new levies, including on car ownership, bread, cooking oil and financial transactions.

Despite the widespread demonstrations, which broke out in 19 of Kenya's 47 counties, lawmakers passed the finance bill in its second reading on Thursday.

They are expected to meet next Tuesday to vote on the third and final reading of the bill.

(with newswires)

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