Ndindi Nyoro accuses State of negligence during Saba Saba protests
National
By
Esther Nyambura
| Jul 10, 2025
Kiharu MP Ndindi Nyoro has criticised the government’s handling of the Saba Saba protests, accusing it of gross negligence and failure to protect Kenyans and their property.
Nyoro, on Thursday, July 10, questioned the effectiveness of the country’s intelligence agencies and demanded accountability from top security officials.
“Was there intelligence that there was mayhem to be meted on the people of Kenya? If not, I want to remind the government that taxpayers give them Sh50 billion for intelligence gathering alone,” said Nyoro. “And therefore if they didn’t know there will be mayhem then they have no business calling themselves government," he said wondered how chaos erupted despite a heavy police presence.
Ndindi Nyoro faults government’s intelligence over Saba Saba chaos, cites Ksh 50B budget allocation
Video: Charles Kahari pic.twitter.com/ZcfQeozWxW — The Standard Digital (@StandardKenya) July 10, 2025
READ MORE
Global experts convene in Nairobi for Clean-Air Forum 2025
The worst of Trump's tariffs on trade has passed, says report
Metropol, KBA to boost women led businesses
TECNO to launch SPARK 40 series as first smartphone powered by Helio G200 chipset
Unlocking Africa's potential: The promise of blended finance
IGAD rallies African unity at AU mid-year summit, champions Agenda 2063 vision
Cybervergent listed among 2025 WEF technology pioneers
Tax collections rise to Sh 2.571 trillion as KRA exceeds target
According to him, the government either ignored credible warnings or simply failed to act.
“And if they knew, why did the chaos got to that point?” he posed. “If the government cannot protect the lives and the property of the people of Kenya, then what’s your work? And there is intelligence budget, allocated for that.”
His remarks follow the July 7 demonstrations, which saw widespread destruction of property and violent clashes between police and protestors, leaving at least 31 people dead, including a 12-year-old child, and 107 others injured.