NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) 鈥 Kenya's president said on Wednesday he won't sign into law a finance bill proposing new taxes that prompted thousands of protesters to storm the parliament the previous day, leaving several people killed as police opened fire. It was the biggest assault on Kenya鈥檚 government in decades.
The government wanted to raise funds to pay off debt, but Kenyans said the bill would have as millions struggle to get by. Tuesday's chaos led authorities to deploy the military, and Kenyan President called protesters' actions 鈥渢reasonous.鈥
He now says the proposed bill caused 鈥渨idespread dissatisfaction鈥 and that he has listened and 鈥渃onceded.鈥 It's a major setback for Ruto, who came to power vowing to help Kenyans cope with rising costs but has seen much of the country 鈥 led by its youth 鈥 unite in opposition to his latest attempted reforms.
"It is necessary for us to have a conversation as a nation on how ... do we manage the affairs of the country together,鈥 he said.
Kenyans faced the lingering smell of tear gas and military in the streets on Wednesday morning, a day after the protesters' act of defiance that Ruto had called an 鈥渆xistential鈥 threat. Parliament, city hall and the supreme court were cordoned off.
At least 22 people were killed, the Kenya 好色tv Human Rights Commission said, and police were accused of some shooting deaths. Chairperson Roseline Odede said 50 people were arrested.
Ruto acknowledged there were deaths, without elaborating, called it an "unfortunate situation鈥 and offered condolences. He also said about 200 people had been wounded in the chaos. Part of the parliament building burned and clashes occurred in several communities beyond the capital, Nairobi.
Kenya has seen protests in the past, but activists and others warned the stakes were now more dangerous 鈥 Ruto on Tuesday vowed to quash unrest 鈥渁t whatever cost," even as more protests were called at the State House on Thursday.
鈥淲e are dealing with a new phenomenon and a group of people that is not predictable,鈥 said Herman Manyora, an analyst and professor at the University of Nairobi. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 know whether these people will fear the army.鈥
The demonstrations showed Kenyans bridged tribal and other divisions to keep the finance bill from becoming law. It would have raised taxes and fees on a range of items and services, from egg imports to bank transfers.
White House national security spokesman John Kirby urged the Kenyan government to exercise 鈥渞estraint so that no further Kenyans are put in harm鈥檚 way while exercising their right to peaceful public assembly."
There were no reports of violence Wednesday, but there was fear. Civil society groups have reported abductions of people involved in recent protests and expect more to come. Kenya's High Court ordered police to release all those arrested in the protests. Ruto said those allegedly abducted had been released or processed in court.
Later Wednesday, the High Court, acting on a challenge from Kenyan lawyers, ordered the military be pulled back from the streets. It was not immediately clear if the government would do so.
The mother of a killed teenager, Edith Wanjiku, told reporters at a morgue that the police who shot her son should be charged with murder because her 19-year-old was unarmed. 鈥淗e had just completed school and was peacefully protesting,鈥 she said.
Many young people who helped vote Ruto into power in 2022, supporting his promises of economic relief, now oppose the pain of reforms. Inequality among Kenyans has sharpened along with long-held frustrations over state corruption. The booming young population is also frustrated by the lavish lifestyles of politicians, including the president.
鈥淗ow did we get here?鈥 Kenya鈥檚 vice president, Rigathi Gachagua, asked Wednesday in nationally broadcast comments after the president鈥檚 turnabout, openly wondering how the government had become so unpopular in just two years. 鈥淲e were the darling of the Kenyan people.鈥
The bill was not as important as people鈥檚 lives, said one Nairobi businessman, Gideon Hamisi. "Many young people lost their lives yesterday. I am a young man, and I feel deeply pained by what transpired.鈥
Opposition leader Raila Odinga called for dialogue. 鈥淜enya cannot afford to kill its children just because the children are asking for food, jobs and a listening ear.鈥
The president's concession was 鈥渟elf preservation鈥 by a leader worried about his reputation, opposition lawmaker Edwin Sifuna wrote on X.
The events are a sharp turn for Ruto, who has been embraced by the United States as a welcome, stable partner in Africa while frustration grows elsewhere on the continent with the U.S. and some other Western powers.
In May, by an African leader in 16 years. On Tuesday, as the protests erupted, the U.S. designated Kenya as its first major non-NATO ally in sub-Saharan Africa, a largely symbolic act but one highlighting their security partnership. Also Tuesday, hundreds of Kenyan police deployed to , an initiative that brought .
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken had been expected to speak with Ruto on Wednesday about the Haiti deployment, a call planned prior to Tuesday鈥檚 violence.
___
Associated Press reporters Brian Inganga in Nairobi, Kenya, and Aamer Madhani in Washington contributed to this report.