Amnesty warns police against excessive force ahead of fuel price protests

Amnesty International has warned Kenya's National Police Service against using excessive force during expected protests on Tuesday, April 21. The alert comes amid public anger over recent fuel price hikes announced by the Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority (EPRA). The group urged Inspector General Douglas Kanja to protect demonstrators.

Amnesty International issued a statement on Monday evening, reminding police officers of every person's constitutional right under Article 37 to assemble, demonstrate, picket, and present petitions peacefully and unarmed.

"The Police bear a primary responsibility for collectively facilitating and protecting this right, not for suppressing it. The purpose of protest notifications is to coordinate public safety, not to request permission," Amnesty stated.

The group referenced past protests where it documented excessive force, arbitrary arrests, harassment of journalists, and obstruction of medical personnel. It warned that individual officers and commanders could face personal and criminal liability for human rights violations.

Recent court rulings emphasized that firearms may only be used when strictly unavoidable to protect life, and treating protests as battlefields is impermissible in a constitutional democracy.

The protests stem from EPRA's announcement a week ago of fuel prices at KSh 206.97 per litre for petrol and KSh 206.84 for diesel. These were later revised downward to KSh 197.60 and KSh 196.63 after President William Ruto directed a VAT cut to 8 percent, but many Kenyans still view the hikes as too steep, fueling online calls on platform X for street action.

相关文章

Police in Nairobi arrest protesters holding anti-fuel price signs during demonstrations.
AI 生成的图像

Eleven arrested in Nairobi during fuel price protests

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像

Nairobi police arrested 11 people during protests against fuel price hikes announced by EPRA on Tuesday, April 21. Demonstrations occurred in several areas including Embu and Kitengela, with some violence reported. Commander Issa Mohamud said the situation remains calm with businesses operating normally.

A petitioner has moved to Kenya's High Court to challenge the latest fuel price increases announced by EPRA. He argues there was insufficient public participation and seeks full disclosure of the pricing formula.

由 AI 报道

Former Petroleum PS Mohamed Liban, ex-KPC MD Joe Sang, and former EPRA DG Daniel Kiptoo were released on police bail on April 6, 2026, days after their arrests and resignations in the Ksh4.8 billion irregular fuel importation scandal. Their lawyers denied wrongdoing, citing National Security Council recommendations, as the government moves to recover losses from importers.

Kiharu MP Ndindi Nyoro has urged the National Assembly to amend laws and cut taxes to bring down fuel prices. His proposals follow recent sharp increases announced by EPRA.

由 AI 报道

Petrol stations in Nairobi and surrounding areas are selling fuel below the EPRA maximum of KSh214 per litre for the May-June cycle, with some offering prices as low as KSh211. This is possible because EPRA sets only a ceiling price rather than a fixed rate.

Kenya's government plans to use a Sh17 billion subsidy to protect citizens from fuel price increases over the next 60 days if Middle East conflicts extend beyond May and June. Finance Minister John Mbadi disclosed these plans to MPs, including potential VAT adjustments.

由 AI 报道

Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority Director General Daniel Kiptoo, Kenya Pipeline Company Managing Director Joe Sang, and Petroleum Principal Secretary Mohamed Liban have resigned after arrests linked to a Ksh4 billion fuel scandal. Officials allegedly manipulated stock data to enable irregular procurement outside the government-to-government agreement. President William Ruto's office called the deal a blatant breach involving substandard fuel.

 

 

 

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝