-
Fil d’actualités
- EXPLORER
-
Pages
-
Evènements
-
Reels
-
Blogs
Four killed as Kenya protests erupt over soaring fuel prices
Four killed as Kenya protests erupt over soaring fuel prices
Kenya Erupts in Flames: Four Dead as Fuel Protests Torch the Streets Right Now
This is not yesterday's news. As of today, Kenya is burning with rage over fuel prices that have skyrocketed nearly 50 percent since the war on Iran began. Four people lie dead, thirty more injured, and the streets of Nairobi and Mombasa are choked with burning barricades and furious minibus operators who have brought the country to its knees.
The nationwide strike called by matatu owners hit like a thunderclap this week. Roads blocked. Cities paralyzed. Ordinary Kenyans caught in the crossfire while politicians scramble for excuses.
The Spark That Lit the Powder Keg
Fuel costs have become a noose around every Kenyan neck. Since the Iran conflict erupted, pump prices have jumped so fast families can no longer afford to get to work or school. Minibus operators, the backbone of daily transport, said enough is enough and shut it all down.
Protesters took to the streets in force. What started as a strike quickly turned deadly. Security forces clashed with crowds just hours ago, leaving four dead and dozens bleeding. This is the human price of soaring energy costs and tone-deaf leadership.
Government Spin Meets Street Reality
Don't let the official line fool you. Officials are already trying to frame this as "isolated incidents" or "foreign interference." Spin, pure and simple. The war on Iran may have triggered the price shock, but years of mismanagement and corruption lit the fuse.
Kenyans aren't buying it. They're living it. When a 50 percent fuel hike lands overnight, no amount of press releases can hide the empty wallets and stranded commuters.
Nairobi and Mombasa on Lockdown
In Nairobi, major arteries are gridlocked by makeshift barricades. In Mombasa, the port city that should be moving goods is instead a scene of tear gas and defiance. The strike has spread like wildfire because the pain is universal.
This isn't just about minibus drivers. It's about every mother who can't afford the school run, every small business owner watching profits evaporate at the pump, and every young person staring at a future that just got more expensive.
The Human Toll They Won't Show on State TV
Four lives lost. Thirty injured. Those numbers are not statistics; they are mothers, fathers, and breadwinners ripped from their families in the last 48 hours. The injured lie in hospitals while leaders issue statements about "maintaining order."
Where is the accountability? Where is the plan to cushion the blow instead of cracking skulls? Kenya deserves answers, not body counts.
What Comes Next in This Powder Keg
The strike shows no sign of letting up. More cities could join. More blood could spill if the government keeps treating protesters like enemies instead of citizens. International eyes are watching, but real change will come from the streets, not from distant capitals.
This fuel crisis is a warning shot. Ignore the people at your peril.
Source: Al Jazeera via YouTube — 2026-05-18T21:47:31+00:00.
- Breaking News Analysis
- World Politics
- Business & Economy
- Technology & AI
- Science & Health
- Environment & Climate
- Culture & Society
- Travel & Tourism
- Sports & Entertainment
- Investigative Journalism
- Opinion & Commentary
- Media & Journalism
- Human Rights & Social Issues
- Education & Knowledge
- Citizen & Amateur Journalism
- Other News Topics