KHRC Demands Justice After Police Kill Man Protesting Earlier Shooting

JUNE 25TH PROTESTS-0141 (1) Police
Police officers patrolling the streets of Nairobi central business district during the June 25, 2025, protests.
Photo
Japhet Kaimenyi

The Kenya Human Rights Commission (KHRC) has condemned the killing of a 30-year-old Murang'a resident by a police officer during protests that followed the fatal shooting of another man by a security guard.

In a statement released on Wednesday August 13, the commission revealed that Stephen Marubu was shot in the chest on Tuesday while the police were dispersing a crowd of protesters.

On Monday, August 12, KHRC reported that a 31-year-old vendor had been shot by a guard at a pineapple plantation in Gatwekera, Murang'a, on Friday, August 8.

The man had reportedly been shot over an accusation of pineapple theft.

Pineapples
A pile of pineapples after being harvested from a Kenyan farm, March 25 2024.
Photo
Global Information Network

In the report, KHRC highlighted the high number of violence in the agribusiness sector, terming it as militarisation, especially around the area that has left several dead or injured.

"On Monday, we reported that a guard contracted by Del Monte Kenya fatally knocked down 31-year-old vegetable vendor Michael Muiruri in Gatwekera, Murang’a, on Friday," the statement read in part.

"On Tuesday, as residents protested his killing, police, backed by guards, opened fire and fatally shot 30-year-old Stephen Marubu in the chest."

KHRC further pointed out the persistence of police brutality across the country, despite the government seemingly putting on measures to curb the repeated police brutality during protests.

It specifically cited the recent establishment of the Presidential Proclamation on the Framework for Compensation of Victims of Protests and Riots, which was established to compensate victims of protests between 2017 and 2025.

"This latest killing shows the persistence of police brutality and exposes the William Ruto regime’s lack of genuine commitment and good faith to ending such senseless violence," KHRC lamented.
 
On August 8, President Ruto established a compensation framework, appointing his senior advisor on Constitutional Affairs and Human Rights, Makau Mutua, to lead it.
 
The framework will run for 120 days and will include members from his office, the Office of the Attorney General, the Treasury and the Ministry of the Interior, as well as other relevant state agencies.
 
"There is compelling national interest in establishing a framework for accountability for victims of demonstrations, including civilians and security personnel who lost their lives or suffered bodily harm during public protests," Ruto stated.
Ruto Signs
President William Ruto assenting to the Conflict of Interest Bill, 2023, and the Social Protection Bill, 2025, at State House, Nairobi, on July 30, 2025.
PCS
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