Two years ago, these young people stepped forward with courage and the belief that their voices could shape the present + future.
As the country remembers its fallen heroes and innocent victims, we pause to honor the brave Kenyans who lost their lives during the #June25th 2024 protests. Their voices and courage will forever remain part of our country.
#LestWeForget #NeverForgotten #CallTheirNames
STATE TERROR HAS NAMES. SO DO ITS VICTIMS.
A TRIBUTE OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY MARXIST KENYA TO THOSE KILLED, DISAPPEARED, ABDUCTED, TORTURED AND IMPRISONED DURING THE RUTO REGIME
SAY THEIR NAMES
#JusticeForOurMashujaas
🚨 BREAKING: This is something I noticed in today's protests.
The top two photos were taken in Githurai and show police officers carrying wooden rungus.
The bottom photo is from previous protests and shows alleged goons carrying what appear to be very similar wooden rungus.
What's striking is that protesters themselves are rarely seen carrying this type of club.
It raises an obvious question: Do the police and these alleged goons obtain these clubs from the same source? Or the police are operating as goons, too?
This is another detail that adds to the long-running debate about the alleged relationship between some police officers and goons during protests.
It also brings me back to allegations made by one of the suspects in the All Saints Cathedral attack, who claimed that some police officers removed their uniforms and operated as goons.
Those claims remain allegations.
Study the collage carefully.
I'm interested in what you notice before I say anything else.
Capitalism speaks the language of “free markets,” but protects its interests with aircraft carriers, military bases, and war games. Economic power and military power have always gone hand in hand.
Protesters took Ericsson’s body after police ignored him. They draped the flag over him and sang the national anthem.
The brother with the fade and orange shirt held his hand. It broke my heart
📸 @festolang
On 9 July 2025, the Court issued conservatory orders restraining the police from barricading roads leading to and within Nairobi's CBD without prior notice to the public. On 2 October 2025, the judge extended these orders pending the determination of the petition.
Today’s barricades raise serious concerns about continued disregard for court orders and the constitutional principle that all public authorities are bound by the law.
The rule of law requires compliance with court orders, especially by those entrusted with enforcing them.
#PoliceAccountability #RuleofLaw
Video of Comrade Mulinge Muteti being forcefully arrested by the Kenyan neocolonial state ,we won't sucumb to the political repression we are going through,we will still remain defiant
For the first time in a generation, young Kenyans organized beyond tribe, party and political patronage to challenge a Finance Bill they believed was unjust. They proved that citizenship is not a spectator sport and that public policy can be challenged by an informed and mobilized population.
Whether one agrees with every tactic or not, the movement exposed a simple truth: a government may hold power, but sovereignty belongs to the people.
The entrenched political elite remains oblivious to the shifting socio-political paradigm, resorting to oppressive state forces to combat this emerging challenge to the established order. Due to political hubris, this generational movement confounds analysts who fail to grasp the intrinsic motivations of a politically awakened and civic conscious populace rallying against a corrupt governance system. No one is spared—neither revered former leaders nor the influential church. Kenya’s youth embody a new political era post the Constitution of Kenya 2010 (CoK2010), placing their faith in this symbolic green book of ideals, envisioning a utopian Kenyan future.
Analysis: https://t.co/PV1JKKbcuu
@realoyungapala@afandibande@WMutunga@KahuraDauti@ReginaldOduor@m_ogada@CiruMuriuki@alexdpking@gndmediauk@wmnjoya@Udadisi@samar42@Farida_N@jacobin@jkobuthi@johngithongo
Today, I stood with courageous Kenyans in Nairobi, Mombasa, Kisumu, and across the nation to mark the historic Gen Z protests anniversary. I salute every patriot who took to the streets, and every citizen who honored this day from home.
The mask has completely fallen. It is now undeniably evident that the goons unleashed to harass peaceful citizens were state sponsored, operating under police escort. But intimidation cannot silence a nation.
Despite the state’s desperate resistance, we marched to Parliament and laid a wreath in honor of our fallen heroes who died during the June 2024 anti Finance Bill demonstrations.
They tried to bury our youth; they forgot they were seeds. The struggle for a just Kenya continues !
#GenZAnniversary
#JusticeForOurHeroes
This day, two years ago, I was on air in the morning, then joined my children on the streets to demonstrate against a reckless + unaccountable government. Today, we remember the needless loss of life on that day. Today, we demand for justice for the families that lost loved ones.
The Kenyan flag stands as a symbol of defiance against comprador rule.
Our martyrs never die.
Wrapped in the patriotic Kenyan flag, they live on in the struggle and in the memory of the people.
#JusticeForOurMashujaas
We marched peacefully to honour the memory of the young Kenyans we lost and to stand with their families in their pursuit of justice, despite constant threats and attempts to disperse us.
The issues that brought young people to the streets on June 25th, 2024 remain with us today: unemployment, corruption, overtaxation, and a government that does not care to listen.
The greatest tribute we can pay those we lost is to continue the work of building the Kenya they believed was possible.
To the mothers, fathers, families, and all Kenyans who carry this loss, you do not walk alone.
Aluta Continua!
#WeWillNotForget