Price of dissent: Magistrate frees 50 Gen Z protesters as state fails to prosecute
The DPP should issue a public explanation for how a case can proceed for this long without a single witness.
by CATHY WAMAITHA
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Protesters take to the street opposing the Finance Bill during the June 2024 Gen-Z led demos /FILE
When 50 young people walked free and a magistrate ordered their bail
refunded on Tuesday, there was a temptation to celebrate.
But the acquittal, delivered by the Ngong law courts, is not quite a victory and not
pure justice; it is an indictment of systemic failure within the prosecution
apparatus.
Chief magistrate Charles Kutwa did not free the 50 because new evidence proved
their innocence. He freed them because the prosecution presented nothing. No
witness. No exhibit.
By failing to produce even a single witness over almost two years, the
state did not just lose a case; it demonstrated a reckless disregard for the
legal standards that protect individuals from the caprice of the Executive.
The state walked into court empty-handed. That is not a slip. That is a
collapse of the prosecutor’s core duty.
The Director of Public Prosecutions should issue a public explanation
for how a case can proceed for this long without a single witness.
Likewise, the Kenya Police Service should be required to justify mass arrests in writing
before charges are filed, ending the practice of scooping first and asking
questions never.
Additionally, Parliament should amend the bail framework so that any
accused person whose case collapses for lack of evidence receives automatic
compensation beyond a refund.
While the state has a right to arrest, that right comes with the
obligation to prove. When it fails that obligation as spectacularly as it did
here, the only honest conclusion is that the arrests were never about lawful
restoration of order. They were about punishment before trial.
Let us name what happened in Ongata Rongai on June 24, 2024. Young
people took to the streets. There was unrest. There were clashes. There was
also looting, which no serious defender of protest should excuse.
But the state responded with mass arrests, scooping up individuals and
hauling them to court. All for nothing.
For nearly a year, those young people carried the weight of criminal
charges. They reported to court. They paid cash bail. They lived under the
shadow of a conviction that the prosecution never intended to prove. That is
not policing — it is deterrence by detention: arresting 50 to
discourage 500.
The court saw through it, with the magistrate ordering the refund of all
cash bail, but the damage had already been done.
Those young people paid money — often raised by struggling
families — for the privilege of waiting for a trial that the state
never prepared.
When a court gives your money back and throws out the case for zero
evidence, it is not a reward. It is a quiet acknowledgment that you should
never have been charged in the first place.
But no cheque can repay the months of anxiety, the sleepless nights, the
job interviews lost because of a pending court date, the neighbour who looked at
you differently after the arrest. That is the real cost of these empty
prosecutions.
Morally, the state owes these 50 young people a formal
apology. Not a guarded statement. A real apology. Because the right to protest
is not a privilege granted by a benevolent government. It is a constitutional
promise.
Kenya’s history is littered with moments when the executive overreached
and the courts pushed back.
After the 2017 election rerun, courts struck down unlawful arrests of
protesters.
During the Covid-19 curfew, magistrates released dozens held without
charge for violating public health orders.
Each time, the pattern is identical: mass arrests, weak or absent
evidence, judicial rescue and then silence.
No accountability for the prosecutors who wasted court time. No reform
of the police who make sweeping detentions without documentation.
The 50 who walked free in Ngong are fortunate. They had a lawyer, Shadrack
Wambui, who did not give up and a magistrate who refused to accept empty
charges.
Reflecting on the significance of the acquittal, Wambui stated
that the decision is a clear message to the Executive that the Judiciary remains
the last line of defence for the common citizen.
Human rights observers opined that such dragnet arrests are
intended to intimidate activists rather than secure convictions.
Chief magistrate Kutwa said the court cannot act on mere suspicion or hearsay, and the total absence
of witnesses suggests that there was no case to begin with.
But fortune is not a right and political rights cannot depend on the
luck of a good judge or a determined advocate.
The right to peaceful assembly means nothing if the state can arrest you
today, hold you for months and then drop the case tomorrow without
consequence.
The Gen Z protesters of June 2024 were not asking for chaos. They were
asking for a hearing. Instead, they got handcuffs and a months-long wait for a
verdict that should have been delivered on day one.
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