At least 31 people were killed and more than 100 others wounded in protests that erupted across Kenya on Monday, a rights group said, as simmering anger against President William Ruto’s government boiled over into clashes between protesters and the police.
The group, the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights, said on Tuesday that it had also documented at least 532 arrests and two forced disappearances.
The police fired live rounds, rubber bullets, tear gas and water cannons at protesters across the country, the group said. From atop deserted overpasses across Nairobi, the capital, officers blasted tear gas canisters at demonstrators congregating below. Some protesters threw rocks at the police, while others danced.
Charles Munyao, a business owner in Nairobi’s central business district, said on Monday that people looted his shops during demonstrations on June 25. Goons, not protesters, he said, had ruined his inventory, and this time, he added, gesturing to some of the men wielding sticks, he needed his own security.
Mr. Munyao blamed the police, who, he said, have not helped him recover any stolen items or lost profits.
“I lost everything,” he said, pointing to a row of closed stores. “If security had been well coordinated, we would not have lost our shops.”
On Tuesday, the United Nations, which denounced the most recent demonstrations, reported that protests had broken out in 16 counties.
Ravina Shamdasani, a spokeswoman for the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, said in a news conference, “It is essential that legitimate grievances at the root of these protests are addressed.”
After the 2024 protests, dozens of people, including activists and medical workers, were abducted, interrogated and tortured, according to human rights monitors and dozens of activists.
The Kenyan police have denied targeting protesters, and Mr. Ruto has said that those who were abducted had been returned to their families.
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