Kenya: at least 10 injured during protests in Nairobi as government orders halt to broadcast coverage – live | Kenya


10 injured during Nairobi protests

At least 10 casualties from protests have arrived at Kenyatta national hospital in Nairobi on Tuesday, Reuters and Citizen TV Kenya reports.

The local outlet said that at least four protesters are being treated at the hospital after having been shot by police.

It added that a female police office who had been attacked by protesters had also been brought in with head injuries.

An injured demonstrator is carried to safety during a protest in the central business district in Nairobi, Kenya, 25 June 2025, marking the first anniversary of the Gen Z protests that culminated with the storming of the national parliament.
An injured demonstrator is carried to safety during a protest in the central business district in Nairobi, Kenya, on Wednesday, 25 June 2025. Photograph: EPA

Key events

Summary of the day so far

Several developments have come to light regarding the protests in Nairobi, Kenya, today.

  • At least 10 casualties from protests have arrived at Kenyatta national hospital in Nairobi during protests to mark the first anniversary of the historic storming of parliament by protesters. The demonstrations last year saw at least 60 people being killed and many more disappearing.

  • All television and radio stations in Kenya have been asked to stop their coverage of the protests marking the first anniversary of last year’s finance bill protests. Communications authority of Kenya (CA) director general David Mugonyi said in a letter to the stations that the transmissions were illegal, with continued coverage risking “regulatory action”.

  • Most Kenyan media appears to be continuing with live coverage of today’s protests despite the order from the government to suspend such coverage. The Standard Group, which runs TV, radio and a newspaper, said in a statement on X that it was an attempted “news blackout” and that it would continue broadcasting.

  • Parliament and the president’s office in Nairobi were barricaded on Wednesday ahead of the protests. There was a heavy police presence and the roads leading to parliament were barricaded with razor wire, as was president William Ruto’s statehouse office. During last year’s protests, demonstrators stormed parliament, burning part of the building as lawmakers fled. Bodies lay in the streets, and medical workers and watchdogs said police had opened fire. The military was also deployed.

  • The protests last year came as a response to a series of proposed tax increases which included hikes on sanitary towels, digital content, car ownership, and basics like oil and bread while many in the country were already grappling with a cost of living crisis.





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