25/06/2025

More protests in Kenya against police violence: Can they help change the system?

 

Can Kenya's protests against police violence help change the system?


A year on from landmark protests over taxes and corruption, many in Kenya are gathering today to take part in remembrance marches for those killed in police violence since June 2024. The recent death of a teacher and blogger in prison has sparked new demonstrations. As Kenyans hope for change, I asked a Kenyan policy analyst how police violence became so extreme and if youth protests denouncing it can foster improvement.





Kenyans started walking out from Monday, in cities like Nairobi, Nakuru, Mombasa and beyond. 

In June 2024, the protests erupted across Kenya against a new bill that would mean a sharp rise in taxes, which culminated on 25 June. They were met with a high level of violence in the police response.

This year, the country's youth are protesting directly against the latter.

If the government had called for calm since last summer, the death of Albert Ojwang in police custody, arrested for posting on his blog a text criticising a police officer, sparked a new wave of protests, early June this year.

"I was not surprised because that is how our police officers operate in this country," Douglas Kivoi, a policy analyst at the Kenya Institute of Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA), told me.

The analyst has been studying the role and behaviour of the police in Kenya for years.

"They are used to settling political scores and silencing any dissent that the powers are not comfortable with. So that is just one of the few that made it to the public domain. Many of those cases hardly make it to the media. If the family keeps quiet or is threatened with dire consequences."

"We have a progressive constitution but our police officers have refused to change and transform themselves and align themselves with the best international practices," Kivoi continued.

Counter-protesters are also marching and supporting the police, raising fears of new violence, especially in Nairobi.

"How on earth do you shoot someone at point blank range like the one we witnessed recently?" Kivoi asked. "Someone who is just selling masks in the streets and then is shot at point blank range? I mean, how on earth would anybody do that knowing that the institution that they work for is under scrutiny for another murder of an individual who was arrested for a misdemeanour offense and then tortured to death in the police detention facilities? So this tells you that the impunity in our police service and policing agencies runs deeper than the public eye can see."


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Listen to my latest podcast episode:

Spotlight on Africa podcast - Justice and art: Kenya’s fight against police brutality; Africa’s bold new art fair in Basel

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Colonial roots of violence

Kivoi reckons that the violence in Kenya's police has been a foundation issue from the very beginning, and actually stems from colonial times.

"Kenya’s police institution was established as a colonial instrument of oppression," he penned. "Police reforms since independence in 1963 have had little impact in changing this. Instead, successive governments have used the police to suppress dissent. This has cemented a culture of violence and police impunity."

Even the best recommendations raised in police reflections and his own studies have not been applied yet.

"We take one step forward and then we take five steps backwards," Kivoi added. "Since independence in 1963, the first president, Jomo Kenyatta, used police to silence any dissent. And when the second president (Daniel arap Moi) took over, it was the same story. Assassinations, torture, detention. Later, when Mwai Kibaki took over the presidency (in 2002), he tried to reform the police. But then the 2007-2008 post-election violence was a tipping point where many accusations were made against the police officers' actions and most of the victims died because of police bullets or police inaction."

In 2010, Kenya implemented a new constitution, which is progressive according to many including Kivoi, "if well implemented and adhered to".

The country also put in place institutions like the Independent Policing Oversight Authority, and an attempt to delink police from the office of the president.

But Kivoi thinks "it never bore much fruit".

"I believe the problem lies in our policing agencies. It's not the resources. So, if you carry out reforms in the name of changing institutions' names and changing uniforms from the Kenya Police Force to National Police Service, that doesn't change the attitude of these officers as they approach their work and in the way they interact with communities.

He thinks the training of police officer must change.

"We need to change the way our officers are trained, because I believe that is where the problem is, the training of these officers, after they are recruited, and then the management of personnel, because promotions are done through tokenism, through who you know. And I hear they must give a bribe to get promoted. And then we need to depoliticise the policing, because police officers, since independence, have been used by the government of the day to settle political scores, arrest people without any justifiable reason, like Ojwang, who was tortured and killed in a police facility." 


System change


Kenya's Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions said on Monday they approved murder charges against six people, including three police officers, for their role in killing Ojwang. The six suspects were arraigned on Tuesday.

So, can we hope for an end to impunity?

Kivoi thinks that it is still difficult to flag out the issues of police excesses and punitive actions because the media in Kenya "sometimes goes to bed with the government", and don't denounce police brutality.

"But the fact that we have got social media, and then we have got a young population that has embraced technology, makes it more difficult for police to think that they will behave the way they have been behaving and get away with it."

The protests, and the technology helping reporting them, are playing a critical role in trying to bring down cases of police excesses when they are interacting with the civilians.  



23/06/2025

Journalism featured

 

My work has been feature by Journalist.Net on their social media:







 


Here is my profile on their site:

https://journalist.net/melissa.chemam


New podcast episode: Kenya / Africa Basel

 

Spotlight on Africa


New wave of protests in Kenyan / Africa at Art Basel


In this episode, Spotlight on Africa reviews the origins and causes of protests in Kenya against police brutality. And you'll also hear from the co-founders of the Africa Basel contemporary art fair, in Switzerland, the newest event of its kind. 


Coming up on Tuesday 24 June 2024: 


Spotlight on Africa



This week, we go to East Africa as Kenyans are protesting to denounce police brutality, exactly a year after a wave of protests organised against an unjust tax, that led tO lots of police violence.

This year's protests were triggered by the killing by the police of a blogger in his cell, Albert Ojwang, 31, arrested for criticising a policeman online.

To uncover the roots of the problem, we speak with Douglas Lucas Kivoi, Principal Policy Analyst, Governance Department, Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA).


Africa Basel 

And we also head to Switzerland for a new artistic event.

Africa Basel is the first edition of a contemporary African art fair created to coincide with the largest fair in the world, Art Basel, in Switzerland. It was held from 17 to 22 June, with over 30 galleries and dozens of artists.


Spotlight on Africa spoke with the two co-founders of the event, as they opened the first days of the event in Basel:

-Benjamin Füglister, artist and cultural entrepreneur born in Switzerland, and now the director of the Africa Basel,

-and Sarah Hachi-Duchêne, curator at unx.art.


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Listen to it from here; from Tuesday:


Spotlight on Africa

Justice and art: Kenya’s fight against police brutality; Africa’s bold new art fair in Basel

22/06/2025

New post on Substack

 

Oppressed opponents: This time, in Rwanda

This post includes the story of an incredibly courageous woman politician, facing one of the most repressive regime in the world...



Oppressed opponents: This time, in Rwanda

This post includes the story of an incredibly courageous woman politician, facing one of the most repressive regime in the world...


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17/06/2025

Israel in Iran: Targeting regime change

 


DAWN Statement on Israel’s Escalating Attacks on Iran and U.S. Citizens Unable To Leave Israel and Iran

(Washington, D.C., June 16, 2025) — In response to Israel’s escalating attacks on Iranian infrastructure and hundreds of thousands of U.S. citizens unable to leave Israel and Iran, DAWN issued the following statements:



"Israel’s targeted attacks against Iranian media and government infrastructure makes clear that this is war for regime change and Iran’s nuclear enrichment capability is just the pretext," said Sarah Leah Whitson, DAWN’s Executive Director. "President Trump campaigned on a promise not to get us entangled in another endless regime change war, but he’s now allowing Israel and its Washington backers to dictate the agenda for a dangerous, new war with Iran."

“The U.S. government has a moral and legal obligation to protect the hundreds of thousands of U.S. citizens unable to leave Israel and Iran," said Raed Jarrar, DAWN’s Advocacy Director. "The Trump administration should act immediately to evacuate all U.S. citizens, including dual nationals, from Israel and Iran before the situation worsens."

"The U.S. should immediately withdraw troops, military assets, and bases from the Middle East because their continued presence is not only a danger to U.S. forces there but to the civilians anywhere near them," said Michael Schaeffer Omer-Man, Israel-Palestine Director at DAWN. "Maintaining a large military presence in the region unwisely turns them into unnecessary, opportunistic targets."


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DAWN is a non-profit organization based in Washington, DC



15/06/2025

Protests and dissent in danger


 New post on Substack:


Protests and dissent in danger

This week, I worked on the police crackdown in Kenya on a blogger, dissent and protests. A situation that mirrors similar issues in other parts of the world...




Read from there:


Protests and dissent in danger

This week, I worked on the police crackdown in Kenya on a blogger, dissent and protests. A situation that mirrors similar issues in other parts of the world...



13/06/2025

Spéciale Gaza sur RFI lundi 16 juin

 


Alors que Gaza continue d'être quotidiennement la cible des frappes israéliennes, que les conditions de vie empirent jour après jour, Israël a ouvert un autre front ce vendredi 13 juin en Iran. 

RFI consacre ce lundi 16 juin une journée spéciale à la situation dans l'enclave assiégée. 

Tout au long de la journée, à l'antenne comme sur les environnements numériques, les rédactions proposent, plusieurs éditions spéciales et magazines, mêlant reportages, entretiens et analyses avec leurs correspondants et envoyés spéciaux, pour éclairer les enjeux et les réalités de cette crise.


Éditions spéciales

> Dans RFI Matin 8h10 à 9h30 : Deux éditions spéciales présentées par Andréane Meslard 

8h10 à 8h30 – édition spéciale sur la situation en Iran en compagnie de Nicolas Falez journaliste au service international de RFI, Franck Alexandre, journaliste, spécialiste des questions de défense à RFI, Guillaume Ancel, ancien officier et chroniqueur, auteur de Petites leçons sur la guerre : Comment défendre la paix sans avoir peur de se battre (Ed. Autrement) et du blog « Ne pas subir » et Agnès Levallois, présidente de l’Institut de Recherche et d’Études Méditerranée Moyen-Orient (iReMMO)

8h30 à 9h30 – édition spéciale Gaza : Avec Sami Boukhelifa, spécialiste du Proche-Orient et envoyé spécial permanent de RFI à Jérusalem, Hala Abou Hassira, ambassadrice de Palestine en France, Agnès Levallois, présidente de l’Institut de Recherche et d’Études Méditerranée Moyen-Orient (iReMMO), Amande Bazerolle, cheffe de mission à MSF et le témoignage enregistré de Rami Al Meghari, correspondant de RFI à Gaza. 

Dans cette édition spéciale également : reportages des correspondants de RFI en Israël, en Egypte, en Tunisie, au Sénégal, en Afrique du Sud, aux Etats-Unis, en France, en Allemagne, en Colombie ainsi que celui d’Amira Souilem « Ann, le bébé de Gaza sauvé par Hanna, une Américaine juive » 

> Dans RFI Midi de 13h à 15h30, autour d'Anne Cantener et de ses invités, les rédactions de RFI et leurs correspondants reviennent sur la situation à Gaza notamment en France, en Europe et aux Amériques. Un accent particulier sera mis sur le « projet Esther » dont s'inspire Donald Trump ; avec un Reportage de Loubna Anaki, suivi de l’analyse de Quentin Peuron, doctorant à l'Université Lyon 2.

> Dans RFI Soir 19h30 à 20h, Romain Auzouly anime un débat autour du thème : « peut-on parler de génocide ? », suivi de l'émission décryptage présentée par Charlotte Derouin consacrée au monde arabo-musulman face à l'horreur de Gaza à 21h10

Dans les magazines 

> Appels sur l’actualité, présenté par Juan Gomez de 10h10 à 10h 40 consacre sa première partie à Gaza, en compagnie d’Adel Bakawan, chercheur associé à l’IFRI (Institut français des Relations internationales), spécialiste du Moyen-Orient, qui répondra aux questions des auditeurs.

> Dans Priorité Santé, à 11h 10, en compagnie de ses invités, Caroline Paré fait le point sur la situation sanitaire et humanitaire à Gaza, avec Pascale Coissard, coordinatrice d'urgence de Médecins sans frontières, à la veille de la conférence internationale coprésidée par la France et l'Arabie saoudite, qui se tiendra à New York du 17 au 20 juin, qui pourrait déboucher sur des engagements inédits en matière de reconnaissance de l’Etat de Palestine. 


> A 17h10, le magazine Sur le pont des Arts présenté par Nathalie Amar accueille Abdellatif Laâbi, prix Goncourt de la poésie 2009 et auteur de Anthologie de la poésie gazaouie d’aujourd’hui (Points) et Tarik Hamdan, journaliste pour MCD et poète. Il a publié Exercices d’apprentissage (Lanskine) dans le cadre du marché de la Poésie de Paris qui pour pays invité cette année la Palestine.

> Les rédactions en langues étrangères proposent des analyses et des entretiens dédiés à Gaza sur les antennes et les environnements numériques dans plusieurs langues. 

La rédaction en espagnol diffusera un magazine spécial à 14h autour de la question « la solution des 2 Etats a-t-elle un avenir » présenté par Natalia Olivares.

 

 

France 24 et MCD doivent également couvrir la conférence internationale à l’ONU dédiée à la relance d’une solution pacifique au conflit israélo-palestinien (si elle a lieu). Décryptages, débats, reportages, entretiens, ainsi que des duplex depuis Ramallah, Jérusalem et New York, sont proposés tout au long de cet événement, suivi de près par la communauté internationale.

France 24 retransmettrait alors  en direct, en français, en anglais, en arabe et en espagnol, le discours du président français Emmanuel Macron prononcé lors de cette conférence.


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12/06/2025

Soutien aux journalistes Yanis Mhamdi et Omar Faiad

 


La Société des Journalistes de RFI apporte son soutien aux journalistes Yanis Mhamdi, reporter français pour Blast, et Omar Faiad, reporter franco-égyptien pour Al-Jazeera.


Nous condamnons leur arrestation et leur détention par les autorités israéliennes aux côtés des dix autres passagers du voilier “Madleen”,  alors qu’ils se trouvaient dans les eaux internationales. 

Nos deux confrères étaient à bord pour faire leur travail de journalistes, et exercer leur métier en documentant cette traversée. Nous sommes choqués de les voir aujourd’hui qualifiés de “militants”, et reprenons à notre compte les mots que Yanis Mhamdi a pu transmettre par écrit depuis sa cellule : le journalisme n’est pas un crime. 

Omar Faiad a été libéré sous conditions et expulsé du territoire israélien, après avoir été contraint selon son témoignage de signer une série de documents. Nous exigeons la libération immédiate et inconditionnelle de notre confrère Yanis Mhamdi, toujours détenu. 

Ces arrestations, en plus de témoigner du blocus humanitaire imposé illégalement par l’armée israélienne sur la bande de Gaza, nous rappellent aussi le blocus de l’information que subit l’enclave palestinienne. À ce jour, comme depuis le 7 octobre 2023, seuls les journalistes palestiniens qui continuent de travailler sur place au péril de leurs vies nous permettent encore de voir et d’entendre la guerre à Gaza. Selon le Haut-Commissariat aux Droits de l’Homme des Nations Unies, plus de 200 d’entre eux ont été tués depuis le début de ce conflit. 

Aussi, nous demandons à nouveau l’accès immédiat, indépendant et sans restriction des médias internationaux à la bande de Gaza, et la protection totale des journalistes palestiniens présents sur place. Nous rappelons également qu’un certain nombre de nos collègues et amis, collaborateurs des médias français dans l’enclave palestinienne, attendent toujours leur évacuation. Nous appelons une fois encore l’État français à faire tout ce qui est en son pouvoir pour leur permettre de quitter le territoire. 


La SDJ de RFI



10/06/2025

New podcast episode - Spotlight on Africa:

 


New podcast episode - Spotlight on Africa:


>> Silencing hashtagdissent in hashtagTanzania, reckoning with genocide in hashtagNamibia



In East Africa, politicians and civil society members are increasingly alarmed by political arrests, as opposition figure Tundu Lissu remains imprisoned in Tanzania, facing the death penalty in a trial that continues to be repeatedly postponed. 

In this week's Spotlight on Africa podcast, we hear from Robert Amsterdam, legal counsel to Lissu and other prominent figures. We also look at the first commemoration of the genocide perpetrated by German colonial rulers over a century ago in Namibia.

https://www.rfi.fr/en/podcasts/spotlight-on-africa/20250610-silencing-dissent-in-tanzania-reckoning-with-genocide-in-namibia