Latest News

Kenya's President orders police to shoot violent demonstrators in the leg

William Ruto, Kenya's president, said that the police should shoot vandals who damage businesses in their legs to incapacitate. This comes two days after 31 people died during nationwide antigovernment protests.

Police dispersed the crowds by using tear gas and water cannons. Some businesses, supermarkets and hospitals have been looted or damaged.

Ruto, in a recent speech, said that anyone who burns other people's belongings should be shot and taken to hospital.

The legs should be broken, not the body.

Last month, the death of a Kenyan political blogger while in police custody sparked a new protest movement fueled by anger about the rising cost of living as well as what they claim is police brutality. This comes a year after protesters against proposed tax increases stormed the parliament.

The protesters' rallying cry, which is mostly made up of young adults who are desperate for work and who have been organised via social media, is that Ruto would only be in power for one term.

His government, which won power in almost three years as a champion for the poor and a promise to end extrajudicial murders, has defied public dissatisfaction.

Kipchumba Mukomen, his interior minister, called the protests of last month a "coup" attempt by "criminal anarchists".

Kenya National Commission on Human Rights, a government-funded organization, said that criminal gangs with whips and machetes were operating in Nairobi and Eldoret (a town located in the Rift valley) during Monday's protests.

The police have not yet commented on the observations of the commission, but they have said in previous statements that they do not deal with "goons".

"Those who attack Kenyans and police officers as well as security installations, businesses, and business establishments are terrorists." Ruto later posted on Wednesday that such criminal acts were a declaration.

We will not let retrogressive elements who are looking for shortcuts to power destroy our country." (Reporting and writing by Vincent Mumo, Hereward Holland, Ammu Kanampilly, Alison Williams).

(source: Reuters)