NAIROBI, Kenya
Kenyan authorities have
blocked the screening of a BBC documentary exposing police officers who shot
dead protestors at last year’s anti-tax demonstrations at Parliament buildings
in Nairobi, the British broadcaster says.Student journalist Ademba Allans trying to reach David Chege and another casualty lying on the ground after the shooting
The report dubbed ‘Blood Parliament’ was set to screen at the Unseen Nairobi cinema on Monday evening,
with a panel discussion.
“A screening of BBC Africa
Eye’s 'Blood Parliament in Kenya' was cancelled due to pressure from the
authorities,” a BBC spokesperson said.
“We are very disappointed not
to have been able to share the documentary and panel discussion as planned. In
the meantime, audiences can watch the film on BBC Africa’s YouTube channel.”
Last June and July’s
demonstrations against the 2024 Finance Bill and President William Ruto’s
government were led by youth, commonly called Gen-Zs.
Over 60 people were killed as
police used excessive force to tackle crowds in Nairobi and major cities and
towns countrywide. Still, no investigation into police misconduct has been
published since.
The BBC documentary, which has
amassed over two million views on YouTube within a day of publication, singles
out security officers believed to have instructed officers to kill, as well as
those who pulled the trigger and killed three young men.
Investigators said they
analysed more than 5,000 images to piece together the sequence of events on
June 25 and the placement of both the victims and the shooters.
An officer identified as Job
Kaboi from Nairobi's Central Police Station can be seen mobilising his
colleagues to kill.
Another with his face covered
is believed to have shot 39-year-old David Chege and Erickson Mutisya, 25,
right outside the Parliament buildings.
Meanwhile, the film pinpoints
a Kenya Defence Forces (KDF) officer as the killer of 26-year-old University of
Nairobi student Eric Shieni, who was shot in the head while fleeing Parliament.
The report has sparked renewed
calls for the arrest and prosecution of all officers who shot at protesters
during the demos.
In response, the Independent
Policing Oversight Authority (IPOA), which investigates complaints of police
misconduct, on Monday said it had completed 22 investigations out of the 60
deaths reported.
The State-owned agency said it
was pursuing 36 other cases, while two were in court. Two files were closed
internally, three were closed following directives from the Office of the
Directorate of Public Prosecutions (ODPP), while four others remain in the
DPP's office.
IPOA Chairman Issack Hassan
said they recorded 233 injury cases during the demos, and blamed
non-cooperation from police officers and witnesses for hampering the progress
of some investigations.
Interior Cabinet Secretary
Kipchumba Murkomen was set to issue a press statement on Tuesday.
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