News

Ruto’s shoot-looters-in-the-leg order defies the Constitution, a President can’t rewrite the law with a microphone.
FIDA-Kenya has condemned the events that unfolded during the Saba Saba and June 25 protests to push for justice.
As the running b attle sraged in the estates during the Saba Saba unrest, some men had to take cover so as not to get hurt. The situation was so volatile.
The wave of bloody protests that have rocked Kenya in the last few weeks have captured world attention with prominent coverage in both the print and electronic media.
Families of protest victims who succumbed to gunshot wounds have reported being denied the opportunity to conduct postmortems ...
Protesters braving police batons, water cannon and occasional bullets on Kenya's streets this week have taken up a rallying ...
The death toll from the Saba Saba protests has risen to 31, with the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (KNCHR) confirming 107 injuries, two abductions, and 532 arrests linked to the nationwide ...
On June 25, Brian Maina, 29, left his house in Umoja’s KCC area in Nairobi County to join protests in the capital's Central ...
Kenya, like much of Africa, is facing a warming world, with several countries enduring a brutal heatwave in the past year.
Kenya's President William Ruto has ordered police to shoot protesters targeting businesses in the legs, ensuring they are incapacitated but not killed.
Speaking in Nairobi during the launch of an affordable housing project, Ruto declared, "I dare you to overthrow me," in reference to what he called reckless political maneuvers masked as ...
President William Ruto asked police to firmly deal with criminals destroying other people's properties during demonstrations. He said goons must be punished.