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.

Key events
Summary of the day so far
Several developments have come to light regarding the protests in Nairobi, Kenya, today.
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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.
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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”.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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.
The group said:
We are consulting our lawyers to establish the legality of this order, which aims to plunge the country into a news blackout.
Meanwhile, we will continue broadcasting in the public interest until the legal position is confirmed.
It said it had information that the communications authority had “ordered signal carriers to deplatform any media house doing live broadcasts”.
The Standard Group said “similar threats” were made at the height of the 2024 protests.
Amnesty International condemned the ban, saying “silencing the press is not the solution”.
Pictures from Nairobi show teargas being used by police on protesters:
Agence France-Presse (AFP) reports signs of violence at the protests in the capital, with some protesters throwing rocks.
A man suspected of being a plain-clothed officer was manhandled by the crowd. Last year, unidentified police were seen shooting protesters during protests.
Alex Mukasa, a 28-year-old activist, said:
We are never violent, it’s the police and the hired goons they bring. When they start teargassing, they bring out the violence.
Local media on Wednesday published the names and photos of some of those who died during last year’s protests, the Associated Press (AP) reports.
The headline in a major newspaper, The Standard, read “A luta Continua,” which means “The struggle continues” in Portuguese and was the slogan of rebels during Mozambique’s struggle for independence from colonial rule.
Political analyst Herman Manyora called the protesters “heroes” who paid the ultimate price and should be remembered.
“The authorities should work with the demonstrators to ensure a good commemoration,” he said.
Manyora, however, warned that the protesters remain unhappy with the authorities because the “government has been intransigent and has hardened the resolve of the young people to keep fighting.”
During last year’s protests, president Willian Ruto dissolved the Cabinet that had been accused of incompetence and corruption but maintained most of his previous ministers in his new Cabinet despite concerns.
A finance bill proposing high taxes that had been passed by parliament was withdrawn, but later in the year, more taxes were introduced through legislative amendments.
The protests have now spread to other major Kenyan cities including Mombasa, Kisumu, Nakuru and Nyahururu, the Associated Press (AP) reports.
Citizen TV Kenya also reports protests taking place in Eldoret, Kakamega, Narok, Busia, Makueni, Nyeri, Laikipia, Nyandarua, Machakos, Homa Bay, and Kirinyaga counties.
Kenyan government orders halt to live broadcasts of protests
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, Citizen TV Kenya reports.
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”.
The live coverage of the June 25th, 2025 demonstrations are contrary to Articles 33(2) and 34(1) of the Constitution of Kenya and Section 461 of the Kenya Information and Communications Act, 1998.
This is therefore to direct all television and radio stations to stop any live coverage of the demonstrations forthwith. Failure to abide by this directive will result in regulatory action as stipulated in the Kenya Information and Communications Act, 1998.
Pictures from Nairobi city centre show police firing water cannon at protesters:
The protests on 25 June 2024 saw police relying on teargas and water cannon to disperse the crowd of thousands of protesters.

Carlos Mureithi
To limit the movement of people into Nairobi’s city centre, police on Wednesday morning barricaded major roads a few kilometres to the central business district.
They also turned away buses and minibuses, popularly known as matatus, further away from the city centre.
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.
While street protests regarding the 2024 finance bill had become less common in the months since June last year, uproar has continued regarding issues such as police brutality and corruption.
A recent series of demonstrations were triggered in Kenya by the death of a teacher, Albert Ojwang, this month while he was being held in police custody after reportedly criticising a senior police official on social media.
Police originally said Ojwang had died “after hitting his head against a cell wall”, but an autopsy showed that his wounds – including a head injury, neck compression and several soft tissue injuries – were likely to have been the result of assault.
“These were injuries that were externally inflicted,” said Dr Bernard Midia, who led a team of pathologists for the postmortem examination.
Public anger erupted further as an officer shot a vendor, Boniface Kariuki, at close range during another round of protests last week.
In a joint statement on Tuesday, envoys from 12 countries including the US and the UK stated its support for “every Kenyan’s right to peaceful assembly and to express themselves” and urged all parties “to facilitate peaceful demonstrations and to refrain from violence”.
“The use of plain-clothed officers in unmarked vehicles erodes public trust,” the statement said.
Rights campaigners condemned the presence of unidentified police officers at protests last year.
The embassies said in their statement that they were troubled by the use of hired “goons” to disrupt peaceful demonstrations, after Reuters reporters saw groups of men beating protesters with sticks and whips last week.
Kenya’s foreign affairs ministry said in a statement late on Tuesday that any policing violations would be addressed through government institutions including parliament and the judiciary.
The counter-protesters have defended their actions, telling Reuters that they are not goons but rather patriots protecting property from looters.
My colleague and the Guardian’s East Africa correspondent in Kenya, Carlos Mureithi, has written an overview of the protests today in light of the first anniversary of parliament being stormed.
You can read Carlos’ article on the topic here: Fears of unrest as Kenyans mark first anniversary of storming of parliament
Parliament buildings and president’s office barricaded
Parliament and the president’s office in Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, have been barricaded on Wednesday ahead of the protests, the Associated Press (AP) reports.
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.
Young Kenyans used social media to plan protests in remembrance of those who died last year. The government spokesperson, Isaac Mwaura, on Monday said there would be no protests, and that Wednesday was a “normal working day.”
But businesses in Nairobi on Wednesday remained closed and police limited the movement of vehicles into the central business district. Hundreds of Kenyans were already on the streets early in the morning, chanting anti-government slogans as police hurled teargas cannisters at some of the crowds.
Here are some of the pictures coming to us through the wires of the latest events unfolding in Nairobi:
Last year’s demonstrations, in which 60 people died and many more disappeared, were prompted by proposed tax increases.
The Kenyan government’s 2024 finance bill proposed a $2.7bn tax increase which included hikes on sanitary towels, digital content, car ownership, and basics like oil and bread, in a country already grappling with a particularly painful cost of living crisis.
Kenya’s cash-strapped government had said previously that the tax increases were necessary to service the huge public debt of 10tn shillings (£60bn), equal to roughly 70% of GDP.
Critics of the hikes began turning their attention to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which was seen as the driving force behind president William Ruto’s since withdrawn plans.
Two weeks before the protests last year started, the Kenyan government and the IMF had a meeting where they agreed the government would increase taxes, reduce subsidies and cut government waste – in effect austerity measures – as conditions to access the IMF’s $3.9bn loan.
Ruto withdrew the bill a day after violent protests erupted around the country after its approval by parliament.
Welcome and opening summary
Hello and welcome to our coverage of the events unfolding in Nairobi, Kenya, today.
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Thousands of protesters have taken to Kenya’s streets to mark a year since people stormed parliament at the peak of anti-government demonstrations, despite fears that they would be met by state-backed gangs and police violence.
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Kenyans have planned to march across the country today to honour those who were killed during last year’s protests. The demonstrations last year saw at least 60 people being killed and many more disappearing.
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Early on Wednesday, police blocked major roads leading into the capitals central business district, while government buildings were barricaded with razor wire.
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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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President William Ruto scrapped the bill in response to the backlash and restructured his cabinet to include opposition figures. However, deep resentment against the president has continued to rise and public anger over the use of force by security agencies has not abated.