rbtfl.
Ruto pledges Sh2bn for protest victims — then the exclusions trigger fresh protests

Ruto pledges Sh2bn for protest victims — then the exclusions trigger fresh protests

A KNCHR reparations framework verifies over 1,000 victims of 2017-2025 state violence, but bars looting and 'ordinary criminal' victims and withholds the names, drawing daily picketing

Leaders·Courts· active किसका पैसा·कौन तय करता है ·12 takes ·अद्यतन 24 जून 2026

Summary

On 15 June 2026 William Ruto received and pledged to "fully implement" the Knchr Framework for Compensation and Reparations for victims of human-rights violations during protests, with Sh2 billion set aside to start payments. KNCHR documented 1,815 claims and verified ~1,022-1,101 victims of protest violence spanning 2017-2025; its five pillars set the highest payouts (minimum Sh2.5m) for deaths. But KNCHR ruled that looting, vandalism and "ordinary criminal acts" do not qualify — only state-linked gross violations — drawing immediate backlash. From 16-25 June, victims organised by the Mathare Social Justice Centre held daily picketing over delays and exclusion, and lobbies including the Kenya Human Rights Commission demanded KNCHR publish the full beneficiaries' list. Defender Frederick Ojiro threatened to "strike inside the headquarters of the KNCHR," arguing the criteria are too technical and lean on distrusted police records.

By the numbers

  • Sh2 billion — allocated to start reparations payments; framework handed over 15 June 2026.
  • 1,815 — claims documented; ~1,022-1,101 victims verified by KNCHR.
  • Sh2.5m — minimum payout for a death; down to ~Sh50,000 for minor injury.
  • 2017-2025 — span of protest violence the framework covers.
  • 245 / 135 / 35 — right-to-life, torture and enforced-disappearance cases catalogued.

Why it matters

The reparations push is William Ruto's attempt to close the books on years of protest bloodshed without conceding accountability — pay the verified, exclude the rest, withhold the names. For victims it reads as a managed settlement on the state's terms, reviving the very grievance it was meant to defuse just as the 25 June anniversary looms.

What to watch

  • Whether KNCHR publishes the full beneficiaries' list under pressure.
  • Whether excluded victims' protests grow around the 25 June anniversary.
  • The pace of actual disbursement against the Sh2bn pledge.
  • Whether reparations substitute for, or accompany, prosecutions of police.