Diaspora (Commonwealth Union) _ The court was packed with tension on Monday when Kenya‘s outspoken activist Boniface Mwangi was led into the courtroom by the judge charged with having committed what many describe as the government’s next attempt to criminalize dissent. The crime? His lawyers quickly dismissed the charge of illegally carrying three teargas canisters as a politically motivated fabrication.
“This has nothing to do with bullets it’s muzzling a movement,” commented lawyer Njanja Maina for Mwangi, following denunciation of the case by human rights groups as an outright threat to intimidate critics of the government. The arrest follows a dramatic raid on his house where security agents allegedly seized electronics under their breaths in muttered utterances of terrorism, a charge many suspected would show its face but which significantly did not on court documents.
Unfazed, Mwangi confronted his attackers outside the court with characteristic bluntness. “Ruto’s the real terrorist here,” he told reporters gathered outside, his voice cutting through the Nairobi heat. “We’re simply pursuing the terrorist in State House killing his own citizens.” His words summarized growing frustration among protesters who’ve marched for months against tax hikes and government corruption.
So revealing, though, is Mwangi’s insistence that the protest movement belongs to Kenya’s vocal Gen Z and not the old-guard activists. “These kids write their obituaries before going into the streets,” he was stunned, indicating the shift in generations of Kenya’s struggle for accountability. The government’s attempt to appropriate the unrest by targeting high-profile figures like Mwangi is growing more desperate as protests that have no clear leaders continue to swell.
The “nane-nane” (August 8) demonstrations risk being the next tinderbox, with activists vowing to take their demands above the dormant finance bill to include wholesale government reforms. While the government lurches for its familiar playbook of legal intimidation and harassment, the courtroom melodrama over Mwangi’s tear gas canisters might just bite back, defecting from a threat to dissidents to another rallying cry for a movement that won’t shut up.
The real question isn’t whether or not Mwangi possessed those canisters but whether the Kenyan government has the moral authority to prosecute him when its own actions, from violent repression to failed promises, are prosecuted in the court of public opinion. As one activist put it: “They’re prosecuting Boniface for carrying tear gas when police shoot canisters at kids. Who’s really on trial here?”