Jetzt haben die Behörden mehrere Filmemacher*innen verhaftet – und wirft ihnen vor, an der Erstellung der BBC-Doku beteiligt zu sein.

https://nation.africa/kenya/counties/nairobi/outrage-as-filmmakers-bbcs-blood-parliament-released-5026640

#rejectfinancebill2024 #rejectfinancebill #kenyariot #Kenyaprotests #Kenia

ICYMI: Kenya: Youth against the Ruto regime: By carrying out a policy of kidnapping, the authorities are attempting to gag youth protest, which is widely present on social networks.
Last spring, huge demonstrations took place across Kenya against the finance bill under the slogan “#RejectFinanceBill2024”. This IMF-backed project aimed to impose new taxes on the population in order to pay off debts amounting to $79 billion. The mobilization, mainly by young people,… http://europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article74788&utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=mastodon
Kenya: Youth against the Ruto regime - Europe Solidaire Sans Frontières

By carrying out a policy of kidnapping, the authorities are attempting to gag youth protest, which is widely present on social networks. Last (…)

Rappel : Kenya - Disparaître pour avoir manifesté : le régime Ruto face à la jeunesse: En menant une politique de kidnapping, les autorités tentent de bâillonner la contestation de la jeunesse largement présente sur les réseaux sociaux.
On se souvient au printemps dernier de ces grandes manifestations qui se sont déroulées à travers tout le pays contre le projet d'impôt autour du slogan « #RejectFinanceBill2024 ». Ce projet soutenu par le FMI, visait à faire payer aux… http://europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article74787&utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=mastodon
Kenya - Disparaître pour avoir manifesté : le régime Ruto face à la jeunesse - Europe Solidaire Sans Frontières

En menant une politique de kidnapping, les autorités tentent de bâillonner la contestation de la jeunesse largement présente sur les réseaux (…)

Kenya: Youth against the Ruto regime: By carrying out a policy of kidnapping, the authorities are attempting to gag youth protest, which is widely present on social networks.
Last spring, huge demonstrations took place across Kenya against the finance bill under the slogan “#RejectFinanceBill2024”. This IMF-backed project aimed to impose new taxes on the population in order to pay off debts amounting to $79 billion. The mobilization, mainly by young people, forced… http://europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article74788&utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=mastodon
Kenya: Youth against the Ruto regime - Europe Solidaire Sans Frontières

By carrying out a policy of kidnapping, the authorities are attempting to gag youth protest, which is widely present on social networks. Last (…)

Kenya - Disparaître pour avoir manifesté : le régime Ruto face à la jeunesse: En menant une politique de kidnapping, les autorités tentent de bâillonner la contestation de la jeunesse largement présente sur les réseaux sociaux.
On se souvient au printemps dernier de ces grandes manifestations qui se sont déroulées à travers tout le pays contre le projet d'impôt autour du slogan « #RejectFinanceBill2024 ». Ce projet soutenu par le FMI, visait à faire payer aux… http://europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article74787&utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=mastodon
Kenya - Disparaître pour avoir manifesté : le régime Ruto face à la jeunesse - Europe Solidaire Sans Frontières

En menant une politique de kidnapping, les autorités tentent de bâillonner la contestation de la jeunesse largement présente sur les réseaux (…)

ROAPE’s Njuki Githethwa writes that the current regime in Kenya has been struck a devastating blow by the uprising of youth. The state has been weakened and is now vulnerable. This regime can fall. A revolution in Kenya is in the air. But the success of this revolution, Githethwa argues, depends on how well placed the social forces, revolutionary movements and organisations are to harness, sustain and extend this uprising.

Originally published in ROAPE

The youth in Kenya are no joke.

They stormed the National Assembly in Kenya on 25 June 2024. They set part of it on fire. They ransacked the hallowed building, smashing everything in sight. Some even ate the food in the cafeteria that was specially made for the ‘dishonourable’ members of parliament and senators. Others smashed into the Senate Chambers and took over as the people’s representatives, including one who acted as the Speaker. The golden mace, a symbol of parliamentary authority, was carted away to set-up a people’s parliament in a liberated zone away from the discredited and dishonoured National Assembly.

MPs were besieged. They were whisked away to safety through an underground tunnel that was not unlike what is known in Kenya as a ‘panya route’, colloquial for a hidden and illegal track. Panya is Kiswahili for rats. The MPs were treated like the parasitic rats that they have become in Kenya. In passing the unpopular Finance Bill 2024 , the MPs, or MPigs, as they are derogatively referred to by activists, had become more than rapacious rats.

The youth were not done yet.

They broke into the buildings of the Supreme Court, the symbol of the second arm of the government. They ransacked and destroyed items in the office of the chief justice who is largely seen as siding with President Ruto and the Kenya Kwanza (KK) regime – the ruling alliance in the country. An office in the chambers of the Governor of Nairobi County was also torched, so were the constituency offices and homes of some of the members of Parliament who had voted yes to the Finance Bill.

The sound and fury of the youth was widespread across cities and towns in Kenya. The youthful protestors had dubbed it as 7 days of rage beginning 21to  27t June. The 25 June was the climax of the rage, referred to as Super Tuesday, that saw the storming of parliament.

It has never happened this way in the history of resistance in Kenya. More will happen in the future. The resistance of the youth is palpable. It’s the same for the masses of people across the country who have been reduced to beggars by the grasping regime.

The Gen-Zs are leading this resistance in the best language that oppression understands. Radical militancy and shaming the regime. What more shame is there than to see MPs fleeing and scampering for safety, some of them even fainting out of fear. This helps to drum into the ears of the politicians how their fickle power is. How power easily flips over, or as the Gen-Zs, mostly speaking in Sheng and Shembeteng slang, puts it in a hip hop song, Ina come, ina go! (It comes, it goes).

At least 41 youthful protestors have been killed by the Kenyan police in this uprising. They rest in power. They are martyrs of our liberation. Thousands have been injured. Many others are still missing. This uprising will not go down in vain.

Behind the sound and fury

The current regime in Kenya under President Ruto and the KK Coalition came to power after the contentious 2022 elections. The regime rose to power behind the guise that they were the true representatives of the underprivileged, the suffering majority whom they referred to as hustlers. They said they were against the rule by dynasties, and the wealthy, represented by Raila Odinga, the flagbearer of the Azimio Coalition and his supporter, Uhuru Kenyatta, the former president.

The majority of youth, especially in central Kenya, and amongst the Kalenjin communities, the bedrock of support of the current president, saw in Ruto a chance to elect one of their own, a fellow hustler who claimed to be a former chicken seller. His supporters were exuberant when he won the 2022 elections. Finally, their man was in power. Down with the dynasty! they said.

In the optics of tribal politics, those who elected the current president were blind to the fact that Ruto was not a hustler like them, but the leader of a cabal of greedy politicians who rose to power and accumulated loathsome wealth through a conniving and a sweet-talking mouth, what Uhuru Kenyatta, his predecessor, termed derogatory in Kiswahili as mdomo tamu tamu (sweet mouth). His supporters forgot that Ruto rose to leadership and wealth at the height of the infamous Youth for KANU 1992, known in short as YK 92, that malfeasant outfit of young political mercenaries who were supporting the Moi–KANU dictatorship, not for the welfare of the country, but to satiate their personal greedy for power and wealth. They supported former president Daniel arap Moi  in plundering the country, including printing fake currency, and in the process, they became very powerful and wealthy.

Ruto was an ardent disciple of a ruthless dictator. Some of us knew that gullible Kenyans had consumed mass poison that would kill the people and the country little by little. The youth in the uprising are expunging this poison from their veins and from the masses in the country.

When did the rains begin to beat us?

Kenya is a deeply unequal country. The gap between the poor and the rich has continued to widen since the country gained independence from British colonialists in 1963. Deprivation and want continue to squeeze the people across generations who struggle against the dead- ends of animal survival. Successive regimes in Kenya have failed to reduce the inequality gap but rather widened it in trickle-down economics driven by the IMF and World Bank, and other varieties of market-driven economics.  It is these generational frustrations, anguish and fury that Ruto and the KK brigade tapped into even when its key economists and advisors were beholden to this very neoliberal economics and politics themselves.

Once in power, the KK government tethered the country onto foreign interests. Global economic shocks raged on, fuelled by the aftereffects of Covid- 19, the war in Ukraine, and related economic imbalances. Ruto and KK stalwarts had shouted themselves hoarse during the campaigns arguing that these factors had nothing to do with the devastation to the Kenyan economy. It was all a result of a ‘dynasty politics and economics’ which they vowed to high heavens to unmask and undo once in power.

Yet the ascension of Ruto and KK did not amount to anything markedly different from previous regimes. The cost of living escalated, especially amongst the lower classes in the country. The poor were getting poorer as neoliberal measures strangled the country, driving the masses to the edges of survival. Education has been commodified, including university education, making it expensive and out of reach to millions of struggling families. Health insurance through the National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF) has been whittled down to a rebranding gimmick. Rights to decent housing have been muddled up in schemes referred to as affordable housing that are not only incomprehensible and confusing but are a kind of a pyramid scheme to whet the appetites of the greedy undertakers of the state and politicians. The recent drought and floods  in the country were a god-sent opportunity for the KK regime to hide their incompetence. The regime has consoled itself like an ostrich hiding its head in the sand even as the masses are drowning in oceans of poverty.

Enter the Finance Bill 2024  

The Finance Bill 2024 was meant to push through a raft of wide-ranging punitive taxes. These included taxes on essential goods, services, digital content, individual incomes, and many more. This bill was both loudly and silently rejected by many sectors in the country, including by corporates and professional associations. Rejection of the bill was vocalized by the youth, led by the Gen-Zs, who took to the streets in a mighty show with the protests across the country. The youth were, after all, the group that would be most affected if the unpopular bill was passed.

Youth turned cyberspace into a terrain of resistance and mobilized millions of others to the streets through the power of social media and community organizing. The hashtag #RejectFinanceBill2024 came alive. The young felt as though they had nothing to lose. Their lives, as Karl Marx quipped in 1848 about the working class, have nothing to lose but their chains, are already wasting away in unemployment and being drowned by the high costs of living. On the other hand, they could see politicians notoriously enmeshed in corruption, embezzlement of public funds, devilish opulence, and other forms of abuse of office and extravagance.

The rage of Kenya’s near revolution was fuelled by generation of hurt and disappointments by neo-colonial governments in Kenya.  The rage was a festering boil that burst open.  Antennas of political consciousness of the youth, especially the Gen-Zs, who largely seemed apolitical, were raised high. The movement erupted like a volcano and the lava of discontent spread across the country. It could not and cannot be stopped, by anything or anyone, except with the complete fulfilment of their demands and a just social order in Kenya. The youth stormed the barricades of arrogant power from various fronts, organically, faceless, leaderless and tribeless.

This youthful uprising is a game changer in the politics of resistance in Kenya. Previously the label of political apathy has been proved utterly wrong. They took by the scruff the necks of incompetent power that has gripped this country for many of years.  Their resistance finally scored initial gains.

As a result of the uprising, President Ruto and his coterie of discredited MPs and government operatives were forced to concede and dropped the unpopular Finance Bill 2024 on 26 June.

Ruto’s actual words of concession “Listening keenly to the people of Kenya who have said loudly that they want nothing to do with this finance bill 2024, I concede.”

Whither the Revolution?

The uprising by the youth in Kenya has scored the first and central demand – the total rejection of the Finance Bill. This is a major victory, but it also deflated the magic and energies of the uprising. The state is already consolidating its power through the police and the armed forces. Subsequent protests in Nairobi and across the country under the rallying call of #RutoMustGo have been less intense. At worst, street protests have been infiltrated by goons hired by pro- regime politicians, just like the Kenya Land and Freedom Army, popularly known as Mau Mau, in the 1950s was infiltrated by loyalists of the colonial regime.  Many protesters have retreated to their comfort zones and social media to savour the victory of the uprising, and to voice other discontents.

Most uprisings in the past end in retreats, betrayals, reforms or revolutions.  Experiences of revolutions in Africa and elsewhere in the world show that the vulnerability of the state is a key ingredient of successful revolutions.

The underbelly of the current regime in Kenya has been struck a devastating blow by the uprising of youth. The state has been weakened and is now vulnerable. Its technical knock- out could be imminent. This regime can fall. It will fall, not if, but when. The fire of mass uprisings has been re-ignited by the youth. A revolution in Kenya is in the air.

How this revolution will chaperon a radical and just social order in Kenya depends on how well placed the social forces, revolutionary movements and organisations are to harness this uprising. Already they are various moves in this direction, including by the united front of various leftist political parties and movements, such as the Communist Party of Kenya, the Revolutionary Socialist League, Kongamano la Mapinduzi (Coalition for Revolution), Students union, social justice centres, feminist collectives, among others.

The youth led by the Gen- Zs know that now it is their time to bask in the sun of change. The future is theirs. They are seizing the time. The working class are fighting for their survival, the middle class for their security. An anti-establishment social movement is coalescing, led by the vibrancy, energies and dynamism of youth. A new and fresh political order is emerging in Kenya, as elsewhere in Africa.

Everything must fall. Everything must change.

Njuki Githethwa is a Kenyan writer and activist-scholar. He is the Managing Editor of Ukombozi Review  in Kenya and a Contributing Editor for the Review of African Political Economy (ROAPE).

https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/post/2024/07/11/everything-must-fall-everything-must-change/

#africa #colonialism #kenya #rebellion #RejectFinanceBill2024 #resistance #RutoMustGo

Everything must fall, everything must change - ROAPE

ROAPE’s Njuki Githethwa writes that the current regime in Kenya has been struck a devastating blow by the uprising of youth. The state has been weakened and is now vulnerable. This regime can fall. A revolution in Kenya is in the air. But the success of this revolution, Githethwa argues, depends on how well placed the social forces, revolutionary movements and organisations are to harness, sustain and extend this uprising.

ROAPE

With conflicting reports concerning police and military killings of civilians, the truth is caught somewhere between a media blackout and misinformation campaign that both favor the people in power.
People on social media have have reported mass killings by officers in Githurai, Juja, and Rongai with some placing civilian deaths at over 200. There are currently videos circulating of Kenyan police and military shooting indiscriminately, attempting to run protesters over with armored vehicles, and photos of children riddled with bullets at the hospital. Regardless of the number dead, the lack of reporting on the violence in these three locations at all could be considered a media blackout.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W0rbEweNuOU
https://www.nyongesasande.com/voices-silenced-remembering-the-martyrs-of-githurai-under-the-shadow-of-william-ruto-governance-in-kenya/
https://www.the-star.co.ke/news/2024-06-26-seven-bodies-booked-at-city-mortuary-after-anti-tax-protests/
https://nation.africa/kenya/counties/kajiado/anti-tax-protests-in-ongata-rongai--4672332
https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2024/6/27/not-afraid-to-die-kenya-tax-protests-inspire-broader-demand-for-change

However, the 2022 presidential election was rife with mis- and disinformation that if effective would result in positive outcomes for Ruto, including doctored videos of Barack Obama endorsing him for president. But even more similar to the reports of violence during these protests were the false claims that wild animals were on the loose and that the military had been deployed on the day before the election. Though we have good reason to believe that the police and military have killed people in these three locations, bad actors could be exaggerating the death toll to discourage people from protesting for fear of violence or death.
https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/africaatlse/2023/01/05/disinformation-was-rife-in-kenyas-2022-election/

Social media algorithms are a black box controlled by forces we are not permitted to understand. As the protests went on, many people posting about them on Instagram started to speak out around a sharp decline in views on content related to the ongoing struggle, while X users noted that the UI was using deceptive design to deprioritize #RejectFinanceBill2024
https://x.com/Shad_khalif/status/1803429735755583494

It is not a coincidence that many of the first major arrests and abductions were of people highly visible on social media, and the same can be said of police knowing protestor gathering points and routes. Because the state has access to social media, publicly posting about organizing plans opens yourself and your fellow protesters up to extreme risk.

State power and the techno-political power of social media empires go hand-in-hand. Global Witness reported that Facebook approved hate speech advertisements that promoted ethnic violence leading up to the 2022 election. As a result, Kenya’s National Cohesion and Integration Commission threatened to suspend Facebook’s service; however, several ministers blocked this action.
https://www.globalwitness.org/en/blog/is-facebook-putting-kenyas-democracy-at-risk/
https://www.voanews.com/a/kenyan-ministers-say-government-not-banning-facebook/6682585.html

Use mainstream platforms like Instagram and X for sharing educational materials, calls to action, and mutual aid; things that benefit from the network effects of millions of users, that you would not mind a cop seeing.

Donate what you can (money and eSIMs) to folks on the ground. For those outside of Kenya, both Wise and Sendwave allow you to send to M-Pesa accounts directly.
https://www.instagram.com/p/C8piBRpKllMR6FaX7JH1NKlA_6uCiDdBwo4xSc0/?img_index=1
https://wise.com/
https://www.sendwave.com/en

If you’re planning on taking any sort of mass action, organize securely using tools like Briar, Matrix, or Signal. If you want to reach more people than you can on messaging apps, consider joining or creating a private Mastodon server.
https://www.instagram.com/p/C8m_cTltPoT/
https://matrix.org/
https://servers.joinmatrix.org/
https://signal.org/
https://joinmastodon.org/

As you see evidence of human rights abuses (particularly around the massacres in Githurai, Rongai, and Juja) submit the media to archives. Archive.org allows you to upload various kinds of media, Sound Of Nairobi is creating an audio archive, and African Digital Heritage is creating a People’s Archive.
https://archive.org/create/
https://www.instagram.com/p/C8mgpnKIEHM/

LSK calls for independent investigations on ‘massacre’ meted on Githurai residents on Tuesday night

YouTube

In May, action began online primarily led by Gen Z through the hashtag #RejectFinanceBill2024 calling for people to contact their MPs to vote against the bill.
https://theconversation.com/kenya-protests-gen-z-shows-the-power-of-digital-activism-driving-change-from-screens-to-the-streets-233065

When this proved ineffective, people began calls to #OccupyParliament, marking the move to in-person protests starting on June 18th. This protest faced police resistance with tear gas and arrests, sparking outcry. Subsequent protests led to amendments to the bill but were met with more police violence, provoking calls for strikes and further protests across Kenya and the hashtag #RejectNotAmend.
https://www.financialfortunemedia.com/the-rise-of-africas-gen-zs-from-tiktok-x-to-the-streets/

Since the protests began, the police and Kenyan military have killed dozens (though the exact number is unclear), this combined with increased scrutiny of the president’s role in the austerity measures and (past and present) violence against civilians have led to the outcry that even if the bill is shelved, #RutoMustGo.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/6/27/kenya-protesters-call-for-president-rutos-removal-after-tax-bill-dropped

Before kicking off in person, the protests started online on TikTok, Instagram, and X. When the protests made their way offline, protesters distributed posters with organizing information, documentation of police brutality, and opportunities for mutual aid through these platforms.
https://theconversation.com/kenya-protests-gen-z-shows-the-power-of-digital-activism-driving-change-from-screens-to-the-streets-233065

As outcry was building around the bill, developer Kenyan developer Kelvin Onkundi created a GPT (like a specialized instance of ChatGPT) trained on the contents of the bill to help answer any questions citizens might have.
https://theconversation.com/kenya-protests-gen-z-shows-the-power-of-digital-activism-driving-change-from-screens-to-the-streets-233065
https://chatgpt.com/g/g-JBq7D0E5x-finance-bill-gpt

Kenyan politicians had their personal and business phone numbers leaked. Digital activists compiled these numbers and shared them across socials. One MP reported that they received over 30,000 texts as a result.
https://theconversation.com/kenya-protests-gen-z-shows-the-power-of-digital-activism-driving-change-from-screens-to-the-streets-233065

When Safaricom began throttling the internet causing region-wide connection issues, activists immediately began sourcing eSIMs from international telcom providers to ensure people could remain connected.
https://mastodon.social/@netblocks/112683046719533144
https://www.instagram.com/p/C8piBRpKllMR6FaX7JH1NKlA_6uCiDdBwo4xSc0/?img_index=1

Not only did the bill increase taxes for many physical goods, there were proposed tax hikes for digital goods and services, for use of data and mobile money transfers, and the erosion of the data protection act that would’ve allowed the KRA to access any citizen’s financial accounts.
https://chatgpt.com/g/g-JBq7D0E5x-finance-bill-gpt

Kenyan police and military have been making unlawful arrests and abducting people, primarily highly visible activists with large followings on social media.
https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/national/article/2001497817/concern-as-gabriel-oguda-more-influencers-allegedly-abducted-ahead-of-demos

Despite assurances from the government that there would be uninterrupted internet, on June 25th, there was a major disruption to internet connectivity throughout East Africa, with Kenya facing the greatest impact. Safaricom claimed that this was due to a undersea cables, but the internet freedom watchdog Netblocks has not found any evidence to support this claim.
https://mastodon.social/@netblocks/112683046719533144
https://nation.africa/kenya/news/kenyans-experience-interrupted-and-slow-internet-connections--4669366
https://techcabal.com/2024/06/27/safaricom-internet-outage-kenya/

Kenya protests: Gen Z shows the power of digital activism - driving change from screens to the streets

Kenyan activism is witnessing a shift from ethnic-based mobilisation to issue-based activism.

The Conversation

Regime Troops Losing the Parliament of Kenya to Protesters in Nairobi, June 2024

https://anarchy.tube/videos/watch/83837cc4-c242-47de-8fc1-ac0bb74f54a0

Regime Troops Losing the Parliament of Kenya to Protesters in Nairobi, June 2024

PeerTube