Kenya's president warns against bid to 'overthrow' govt by protests
Kenya has seen a wave of protests, initially led by young people angry at the state of the economy, corruption and police brutality, since June last year when proposed tax rises triggered widespread anger.
FILE: Kenya's President William Ruto speaks during a joint press conference with Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (not pictured) after their bilateral meeting at the prime minister office in Tokyo on 8 February 2024. Picture: AFP
NAIROBI - Kenyan President William Ruto warned Wednesday against attempts to "overthrow" the government through "unconstitutional means", claiming recent violent protests were sponsored.
Kenya has seen a wave of protests, initially led by young people angry at the state of the economy, corruption and police brutality, since June last year when proposed tax rises triggered widespread anger.
The demonstrations have been met with increasing force by police.
"They want to start chaos, organise protests, burn people's property, bring disaster so as to overthrow the government before 2027... You cannot tell us that you want to organise chaos to overthrow the government!" Ruto said in Swahili, addressing supporters in the capital Nairobi.
"You cannot sponsor violence and go scot-free," he added, saying any attacks on the police would be seen as a "declaration of war!"
Ruto's toughest remarks yet come after nationwide anti-government rallies earlier in the week saw at least 31 people killed, according to rights groups.
Kenyan rights groups have condemned police brutality during the protests, as well as the rise of people paid to disrupt and loot during rallies.