The Kenyan High Court has approved the use of military force to reestablish order after days of anti-tax protests that eventually overran police.
More than 20 people have reportedly been killed in the nationwide protests that are largely led by young people opposed to government plans to increase taxes.
On Thursday, police used tear gas to separate demonstrators who had threatened to storm the presidential palace while armoured military vehicles patrolled the streets of Nairobi, the country’s capital.
A judge ruled that government installations needed to be protected by the military deployment, but he gave the authorities two days to explain the duration of the deployment and its rules of engagement.
“To deploy the military in a blanket manner without defining their scope of operation and the duration of their operation is a dangerous trend that can bring about militarization of the country,” ruled Justice Lawrence Mugambi.
The Kenya Law Society stated that it “respects but disagrees” with the decision, despite having petitioned the court to force the troops back to the barracks.
A day after irate protestors briefly stormed parliament and set it on fire, President William Ruto gave in to pressure on Wednesday and announced he would remove the financial law containing the unpopular tax measures.
“It was a huge blow to the government as it left a “large hole” in the budget,” government spokesman Isaac Mwaura said in response to the bill’s withdrawal.
“It is really a big setback,” Mr. Mwaura said, blaming “misinformed” Kenyans for opposing it.
“There was a very well choreographed campaign, both locally and internationally, to misinform and disinform people so that they could create a revolt,” he added.
As required by lenders like the International Monetary Fund, the finance bill sought to increase taxes in order to assist in reducing the nation’s debt loads.
Many demonstrators are sceptical that the president will carry out the budget cuts he unveiled on Wednesday.
Additionally, a doctors’ group states that at least 23 people have been killed and that demonstrators have been arbitrarily abducted, which has infuriated them.
The president is currently being urged by some to resign. There have been allegations that state agents kidnapped hundreds of people connected to the demonstrations.
There have been allegations that state agents kidnapped hundreds of people connected to the demonstrations.
President of the Law Society of Kenya (LSK), Faith Odhiambo, notes that many individuals who have been released have not been physically hurt but are so scarred by the experience that they do not want to talk about it.
“Most of them were thrown on the roadside and left really shaken. One of them left for the village where he said he felt safer near his mother,” Ms. Odhiambo told a local radio station.
Chief Justice Martha Koome has denounced the kidnappings, calling them a direct assault on the rule of law.
The Deputy President Kenya, Rigathi Gachagua has expressed regret that the criminal justice system has been used to manage the country’s politics.
The state-funded Kenya National Human Rights Commission said it had assisted in securing the release of over 300 people who had been “illegally detained.”.
However, Mr. Mwaura refuted this, saying “criminal elements who wanted a coup d’etat” had tried to take advantage of the peaceful protests.