The world is scrambling to understand Kenya’s historic protests – this is what too many are missing | Nanjala Nyabola
A finance bill was the trigger, but the backdrop is government debt and blinkered interventions from western institutions
There is as yet no resolution after an unprecedented week in Kenyan politics. What began as protests against a rushed-through finance bill has revealed a crisis of legitimacy within the executive, the legislature and the police that were sent to do the government's bidding. And while the protesters have been very clear about their demands - reject the finance bill - outsiders who are accustomed to simplistic narratives about African politics have been scrambling and failing to understand what these events really mean.
Kenya is experiencing a polycrisis of sorts. The finance bill is the immediate trigger: an annually produced document that lays out the government's fiscal strategy, and which normally passes without much comment. But this year it attracted an unprecedented level of attention because it contained several proposals for the taxation of everyday goods, including bread, sanitary towels and more. Kenyans were already struggling with the effects of a collapsing currency and the aftermath of the Covid-19 crisis. However, the government was not merely looking to meet its financial obligations but to increase year-on-year spending from the last finance bill, which had already introduced a number of new taxes.
Nanjala Nyabola is a writer, political analyst and author of Digital Democracy, Analogue Politics: How the Internet Era is Transforming Politics in Kenya
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