Kenya’s Ruto climbs down on tax hikes
Kenyan President William Ruto withdrew the planned tax hikes on Wednesday, bowing to pressure from protesters who stormed parliament, launched demonstrations across the country and threatened more action this week.
The move will be seen as a major victory for a week-old, youth-led protest movement that grew from online condemnations of tax rises into mass rallies demanding a political overhaul, in the most serious crisis of Ruto’s two-year-old presidency.
Despite the Ruto’s announcement, defiant protesters repeated calls for him to step down and vowed further action in the streets. Some demonstrators said on social media that despite Ruto’s climb-down they would go ahead with a rally planned for Thursday (today).
Ruto announced he would not sign a finance bill, including the tax increases, a day after violent clashes between police and protesters at the assembly and nationwide left at least 23 people dead and scores wounded, according to medics.
“Listening keenly to the people of Kenya who have said loudly that they want nothing to do with this finance bill 2024, I concede. And therefore, I will not sign the 2024 finance bill, and it shall subsequently be withdrawn,” he said in a televised address with lawmakers.
Vice President Rigathi Gachagua asked young people to call off the protests to avoid any further loss of life and destruction of property, and blamed the intelligence services for giving the government poor advice. In a speech Gachagua called on the head of the National Intelligence Service to resign.
However, protesters were defiant. Boniface Mwangi, a prominent social justice activist involved in the protests, called for a million-people march. “The arrogance is gone, but the lies are still there,” he said on social media platform X. “They unleashed goons and police to kill peaceful protesters.”
Other members of the protest movement continued to post on social media using the hashtag #tupatanethursday, or “see you on Thursday” in a mix of Swahili and English. “It is currently beyond the Finance Bill,” Kalonzo Musyoka, a senior opposition leader and former vice president, said in an X post.
Ruto said he would now start a dialogue with Kenyan youth, without going into details, and work on austerity measures – beginning with cuts to the budget of the presidency – to make up the difference in the country’s finances. He said the loss of life on Tuesday was “very unfortunate”.