The military still has a free hand to
move their tankers to the streets to
neutralise any civilian threats against
the government of the day.
It has emerged the Gazette notice
that allowed the deployment of the
military following the Gen Z protests
last year is still in force.
The disclosures came as Defence
CS Soipan Tuya rubbished claims the
military had plotted a coup on President William Ruto’s regime, following the June 25, 2024, deadly protests.
Speaking in the Senate chambers
yesterday, Tuya said the Gazette notice that allowed for the deployment
has not been lifted.
“No. The deployment has not been
revoked,” Tuya told Senators.
The disclosures imply that President Ruto, who is the commander
in chief of the Armed Forces has a
free hand to unleash the military on
civilians in the event of unrest, akin
to the Gen Z protests.
The CS was responding to questions from the senators during the
question-and-answer time at the
plenary.
Tuya cited ongoing court cases for
the existence of the Gazette notice,
more than seven months after the
country regained calm.
She defended the deployment, saying it was not reckless but a well thought-out idea to support the police in restoring peace.
“But I would also want us to, again,
remember that the deployment of
June 2024, is in support of the National Police Service, just like the
other secondary operations that are
within the country.”
Kitui Senator Enoch Wambua
sought to know whether the notice
issued following the protests was still
in force.
“When in July 2024, the KDF was
unleashed on our streets, what battalion was released to the street? What
was the mandate of their mission and
the Gazette notice that released KDF
to the streets? Has it been revoked or
are they on the streets in perpetuity?”
Wambua posed.
However, the CS declined to disclose details and mandate.
“What restricts me from answering
your questions is the provision of the
law on limitations of information under the KDF law. The questions on capacity and disposition of deployment
fall under that limitation,” she said.
On June 25, 2024, angry, youthful
protesters dubbed ‘Gen Z’ invaded
Parliament in an unprecedented move.
The leaderless youth demanded
the withdrawal of the Finance Bill
2024, that contained hiked taxes.
The
government responded by asking the
National Assembly to approve the
deployment.
MPs, especially those leaning towards Kenya Kwanza, hurriedly approved the deployment.
Azimio MPs
boycotted the session and later sued
the National Assembly.
They argued
that the deployment was irregular
and procedurally infirm.
The law requires that the KDF only
be deployed internally in case of a
disaster or an emergency, which did
not exist at the time.
On the claims the military had
plotted an ouster, Tuya termed these
as baseless, inaccurate and reckless.
The CS was responding to Nairobi Senator Edwin Sifuna, in relation
to a report by a local daily alleging
opposition chief Raila Odinga had
rescued Ruto’s government from a
military coup.