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Victims of violent protest to get state compensation

Publish date: 22 June 2026
Issue Number: 1182
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: Kenya

Kenya will pay compensation to almost 2 000 victims of protest-related human rights abuses, President William Ruto said has said, marking a rare national reparations process outside the judicial system, reports africanews. Violent protests in the East African nation have left a trail of destruction in which hundreds of people have died, were injured, or suffered business losses. In the most recent incident, two demonstrations over an Ebola quarantine centre for Americans left three people dead and dozens of others injured. The victims of human rights abuses will begin receiving compensation from next week after vetting by the state-funded human rights commission. The total pay out is expected to total $15m. Ruto, speaking during the release of a national Reparations Framework Report, said the compensation represents ‘a state acknowledgment that harm occurred’ and was not an ‘admission’ of guilt. Dozens of people died and hundreds of others were injured in annual anti-government protests against increased taxes in June 2024 and June 2025. Property worth millions of dollars was destroyed in a series of protests that the government said were infiltrated by criminals. Ruto said the compensation was not the ‘price of life, of pain or of loss’, and that should not be seen as a ‘reward for violence or criminality’ in a country where violent protests are common. ‘A nation heals by tending to its wounds rather than pretending they does not exist,’ he said.

Full africanews report

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