Before the white coffin containing Kenyan hawker Boniface Kariuki was carried into a vehicle for his final journey home, his mother screamed in grief — yet another parent to lose a child in deadly demonstrations roiling the east African nation.On Friday, hundreds of mourners streamed into a field near Kariuki’s home, roughly 100 kilometres (60 miles) from Nairobi, to witness his burial and vent their anger and grief.The 22-year-old mask vendor was shot at point-blank range by an officer in riot gear during a rally against police brutality in June, and later died in a Nairobi hospital.That day, Kariuki was not protesting.The incident was captured on film and shared widely across social media, with mourners placing a still image of the moment just before he was shot on top of his coffin, which was also draped in a Kenyan flag.His death has thrust the long-standing issue of police brutality in the country back into the spotlight and galvanised anger towards a government many Kenyans see as corrupt and unaccountable.”Our grief cannot be understood.
We shall miss you constantly,” his younger sister Gladys Wangare said.”Your constant smile, genuine concern about our family. Life will never be the same again. Your place will remain empty,” she added.As the coffin travelled to his hometown of Kangema, villagers gathered to see the entourage, with riot police eyeing the calm crowds from junctions.Kariuki’s friend and fellow hawker Edwin Kagia, 24, described him as a hardworking, humble and “good guy” who was always cracking jokes.”I used to hear that police kill people, but I could not imagine it would happen to my brother,” he said.”We are in sorrow.”- ‘Tears of bitterness’ -Waves of protests have swept Kenya since June 2024, when proposed tax rises triggered widespread anger.The increasingly violent rallies — often dominated by young men and paid thugs — have been met with a harsh police response, with rights groups saying at least 50 people have died in the past two months.While President William Ruto has condemned the violence, promising those responsible would be held accountable, he has also backed the police — telling officers to shoot would-be looters “in the leg”.At the funeral, Kariuki’s friend Kagia condemned the president’s remarks, urging him to apologise.”The head of state uttering such statements de-filters the unity of the nation,” he said.It comes a day after the country’s top prosecutor said his office had “approved a murder charge against a police officer who allegedly murdered a mask vendor in Nairobi”.Despite the arrest, people at the funeral remained sceptical and upset.”Whoever did all this, let him actually not know any peace on this earth,” said Emily Wanjira, a spokesperson for the family.”We are crying tears of bitterness.”
Fri, 11 Jul 2025 13:00:08 GMT