As John Aron headed out to join the protests raging outside parliament, he felt something huge had already shifted in Kenyan politics, jolting it away from its decades of dominance by party strongmen and ethnic loyalties.
At least eight people died when police opened fire on crowds trying to storm the assembly to protest against tax hikes on Tuesday. President William Ruto blamed “criminals”. Aron, from Nairobi’s Kibera slum, said the demonstrators were part of a brand new movement.
“It is going to unite the youth and the old like never before,” the 29-year-old told Reuters.
Over just one week, what began as an online outpouring of anger by young, tech-savvy Kenyans at proposed taxes on bread and diapers has morphed into nationwide movement untethered from the politicians who have traditionally rallied the masses.
Ruto’s allies initially dismissed the protests as a fit of pique by wealthy, entitled kids.