As we plan our exciting and radical 2020 schedule, we would like to share a recap of our milestones in the past year and our events and forums that took place.
#RadicalTalksKe
A group of activists, alongside the Mathare Social Justice Centre, wants to bring to the attention of the Nairobi Metropolitan Services the various abuses committed by an officer named Baraza, stationed at the Pangani Police Station. @MathareSJustice @suhayllo @NMS_Kenya
“Policing in Kenya has become similar to terrorism where the state and leadership of the executive arm of government has sanctioned violence, abuse, disappearances and killings of innocent Kenyans living in Kenya’s urban informal settlements.”
...increased surveillance on active organizers and educators on aspects of imperialism and (de)colonialism and even using military force to suppress dissenting views. Well what did we expect with allowing the British formed police force to continue execution of ‘the law’
Even in the neocolonial era, after ‘formal’ independence, empire has enabled continuity in its former colonies through official discourse to civilize them. In this case, Kenya has done everything in its power to criminalize decolonization through state agents...
The colonial facade as strategic distortion and violence to continue empires rule. The violence met on the Kimathi family both physically and psychologically is egregious and an ephemera of colonialism in Kenya.
Today in continuation of colonialism
"True to their word, I have been arrested. Now locked up at Rumuruti police station. Tell my mother that if by tomorrow I will not be alive, I have been killed at Rumuruti".
https://t.co/Cxi74sPo0t
“The Constitution purports to be a document of “we the people,” yet everywhere we look there has been mal-execution. We have been un-“peopled.”” @TheNyokabi#KatibaAt10
https://t.co/gJudqnGfrN