‘No Blood On My Hands,’ Ruto Insists After Deadly Kenyan Protest
Hundreds of people marched in the Kenyan capital Nairobi Sunday, to honour those who died in anti-government demonstrations this week, as President William Ruto insisted that: “I have no blood on my hands.”
Rights groups say at least 30 people died in protests driven by a government drive to substantially raise taxes in the East African country.
Following the violence, Ruto announced an about-turn earlier this week, saying he would “listen to the people” and would not sign the finance bill into law.
Ruto, in a television interview, put the toll at 19 — the first figures issued by the authorities — and promised a full investigation into the deaths.
Largely peaceful rallies turned violent last Tuesday when lawmakers passed the deeply unpopular tax increases following pressure from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Police opened fire on protesters who stormed the parliament complex and a fire broke out.
“I have no blood on my hands,” said Ruto during the interview with Kenyan TV.
Referring to the deaths, he said: “It is very unfortunate. As a democracy that should not be part of our conversation…”
“There will be an investigation on how these 19 Kenyans died,” he added. “There will be an explanation for each and every one of them.
“The police have done the best they could,” said Ruto.
“If there have been any excesses, we have mechanisms to make sure that those excesses are dealt with.”
And he added: “Any killer cop who went beyond what is provided for in the law will have action taken against them.”