Fri | Sep 20, 2024

Turmoil widens as rival protesters clash

Published:Wednesday | July 24, 2024 | 12:08 AM
Demonstrators on motorcycles gesture during a protest in Nairobi, Kenya, yesterday.
Demonstrators on motorcycles gesture during a protest in Nairobi, Kenya, yesterday.

NAIROBI (AP):

Anti-government protesters in Kenya’s capital clashed with an emerging pro-government group on Tuesday, with hundreds swarming and burning a motorcycle belonging to people who expressed support for the country’s president. The military made a rare deployment as the protests focused on the country’s main airport.

The weeks of turmoil in East Africa’s economic hub have led to dozens of deaths, the firing of most Cabinet members and calls for President William Ruto’s resignation. Protests began with Kenyans’ rejecting a proposed bill to impose more taxes as millions in the country barely get by amid rising prices.

The pro-government movement has emerged to counter the youth-led anti-government one. In Nairobi on Tuesday, the pro-government group took to the streets ahead of the latest anti-government demonstration.

One protester, Charles Onyango, questioned why police were not confronting the pro-government demonstrators yet, again, dispersed those calling for change.

“Police are just standing by and letting these [suspected] hired goons to disrupt our protests and cause chaos,” Onyango said.

It was not immediately clear who was behind the pro-government movement.

Kenya’s main airport was meant to be the site of the latest protest, and anti-government demonstrators lit bonfires in a suburb along the highway that leads to it. Airport officials asked travellers to arrive early, and flights continued.

Police hurled tear gas canisters at hundreds of protesters who blocked another road that leads to the airport, and the military was deployed to the Pipeline area east of the capital.

Protests also were reported in Kenya’s second-largest city, the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa, as well as the city of Kisumu on Lake Victoria and Migori.

Kenya’s anti-government protests are in their fifth week. Under pressure, President William Ruto declined to sign the bill imposing new taxes and dismissed almost all Cabinet ministers, but protesters continue to call for his resignation.

At least 50 people have died and 413 others have been injured in the protests since June 18, according to the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights. The political opposition is demanding that families of those killed be compensated and that charges against those arrested during protests be dropped.

Police have stopped saying how many arrests they make in the protests. Rights groups, opposition figures and family members for weeks have expressed concern about alleged abductions by officers.