Kenya Gen Z protests tax hike

Armed with smartphones and whistles, thousands of young Kenyans took to the streets across the country on Thursday to protest tax hikes, livestreaming the demonstrations in a vivid show of anger by Gen-Z citizens against the government.

Police in the capital Nairobi fired tear gas and water cannons against protesters near the parliament, but apart from isolated scuffles earlier in the day and some groups setting fire to tyres and road signs around dusk, the demonstrations remained mostly peaceful.

Led largely by young Kenyans, the demonstrations — dubbed “Occupy Parliament” — began in Nairobi on Tuesday before spreading nationwide on Thursday.

They have galvanised widespread discontent over President William Ruto’s economic policies in a country already grappling with a cost-of-living crisis, with protesters turning to TikTok, Instagram and X to plan and livestream the demonstrations.

Hours after Tuesday’s action, which saw hundreds of youth face off against the police, the cash-strapped government agreed to roll back several of the tax hikes laid out in a new bill.

But the government still intends to go ahead with some tax increases and has defended the proposed levies as necessary for filling its coffers and cutting reliance on external borrowing.

On Thursday, protests were held across Kenya, with thousands assembling across Nairobi, the Indian Ocean city of Mombasa, the Rift Valley city of Nakuru and the opposition bastion of Kisumu, according to AFP journalists and images broadcast on TV.

Isolated clashes broke out in Nairobi between protesters and police, who used tear gas and water cannons against demonstrators gathering near the parliament, which began debating the bill on Wednesday.

Despite a heavy police presence and closures along several roads leading to parliament, thousands of protesters gathered in groups, blowing whistles and vuvuzelas, singing the national anthem and chanting: “Ruto must go”.

Margaret, a 23-year-old jobseeker, told AFP that she was “tired of being lied to” and being dismissed as a “keyboard warrior” by those in power.

“Gen-Z — we are the voice of the people. And that’s something they are not used to, so we are just being called keyboard warriors but I guess they are also terrified of this,” she said.

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