Kenya cited as Amnesty warns of increasing global aggression
The report details a pattern of violent repression against youth-led movements
by CATHY WAMAITHA
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In Kenya, the 2025 landscape was marked by a violent crackdown on Gen Z-led movements /FILE
Kenya has emerged as a critical battleground for the future
of human rights in Africa.
This is captured in Amnesty International’s 2026 annual
report, which warns that the world is on the brink of a “perilous new era”.
The report, The State of the World’s Human Rights, details
how Kenyan authorities have mirrored a global trend of “predatory” governance,
using lethal force and digital surveillance to crush youth-led protests while
the broader continent grapples with a surge in conflict and displacement.
In Kenya, the 2025 landscape was marked by a violent
crackdown on Gen Z-led movements.
Security forces were documented using excessive force
against demonstrators expressing socio-economic grievances, with authorities
deploying technology-facilitated repression.
The report details a pattern of violent repression against
youth-led movements.
On June 25, 2025, at least 19 people were killed when police
deployed force against protesters marking the anniversary of the 2024
demonstrations.
Less than two weeks later, nationwide protests on Saba Saba
Day saw at least 38 more deaths and over 500 injuries.
Beyond the street-level violence, Kenyan authorities have
weaponised the law, charging more than 500 protesters with offences under
anti-terrorism legislation.
“We are confronting the most challenging moment of our age,”
Amnesty International’s secretary general Agnès Callamard said.
“Humanity is under attack from transnational anti-rights
movements and predatory governments determined to assert their dominance
through unlawful wars and brazen economic blackmail.”
The crisis in Kenya reflects a wider regional trend of
authoritarianism in Africa, as more than 10 million people were internally
displaced across the continent in 2025 due to the combined pressures of
conflict and climate change.
Famine was officially declared in parts of the Sudanese
region. Meanwhile, the conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo was fuelled
by Rwandan support for the M23 armed group, which captured key cities and
tortured detainees.
Further south, South Africa struggled with high levels of
gender-based violence and xenophobic attacks. These were exacerbated by
sweeping cuts to international aid budgets that crippled healthcare and
HIV/Aids programmes.
The global context is equally harrowing.
Amnesty describes a “descent into lawlessness” led by
powerful actors, including the USA, Russia and China.
The report highlights Israel’s maintained aggression against
Palestinians in Gaza, where 26,791 people were killed in 2025 alone, 60 per
cent of whom were women, children and the elderly.
It also cites
Russia’s intensified aerial attacks on Ukrainian civilian infrastructure, which
have left nearly 15,000 civilians dead since 2022.
The United States has faced criticism for its role in
undermining international justice.
In addition to carrying out more than 150 extrajudicial
executions abroad, US authorities launched an “unlawful clampdown” on migrants
and used AI-powered tools to target students expressing solidarity with
Palestinians.
In 2025, 1,143 people were killed by police in the US, with
the Black population disproportionately affected.
“The world order they propose is one that mocks and discards
racial, gender and climate justice,” Callamard warned.
She noted that European states have largely “appeased” these
assaults on international law, failing to halt irresponsible arms transfers
that fuel atrocities in Gaza, Sudan and Myanmar.
Despite this “predatory world order”, the report notes that
millions are resisting.
From dockworkers in
Morocco and Italy disrupting arms shipments to street-by-street protests
against militarised immigration enforcement in the US, civil society remains a
defiant force.
Kenya’s youth-led
protests are cited as a primary example of this global wave of resistance.
“Let 2026 be the year we assert our agency,” Callamard said.
“History is not merely something imposed upon us; it is ours
to make. For the sake of humanity, the time to make history is now.”