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THE HUMAN COST OF FUEL

By Chelangat Caren,

 

On the morning of May 18, 2026, Nairobi did not wake up to matatu horns. It woke up to silence. Thika Road was blocked with burning tires. Mombasa Road was deserted. And in three towns across the country, families got the call no one wants: “There has been an incident.”

By evening, Interior Minister Kipchumba Murkomen was on national TV with a number that would define the day: four Kenyans dead. Thirty injured. All of it over the price of fuel. The strike had been announced days before. Transport operators said they could not run matatus and boda-bodas on diesel at Ksh 242.92 a liter. The math did not work. So at midnight, the wheels stopped.

What started as a planned work stoppage turned into something messier. In Nairobi, protesters blocked key arteries into the city. In Githurai and Kayole, roads were barricaded with stones and burning tires. Police responded with tear gas. In some areas, it escalated to running battles.

Murkomen told a televised press conference, “We lost four Kenyans in today’s violence, which also saw more than 30 people injured.” He said “criminal elements” had hijacked peaceful protests, targeting government and private property. Protest organizers said police overreacted to unarmed crowds.

The deaths happened in three locations: two in Nairobi’s outskirts, one in Nakuru, and one in Mombasa. The injured filled hospitals in Kenyatta National, Mama Lucy, and Coast General. Some had gunshot wounds. Others had injuries from being caught in stampedes as tear gas filled narrow streets.

The government has not released names yet, citing ongoing investigations. But the stories are already circulating on social media and in hospital corridors.

There is the 27-year-old matatu conductor in Embakasi who was on his way to work when he got caught between protesters and police. He died from a head injury. His wife posted a photo of him with their 2-year-old daughter: “You were going to work. Not to fight.”

In Nakuru, a 19-year-old college student was shot while watching the protests from the roadside. His classmates say he was not throwing stones. He was just curious.

A 42-year-old market trader in Mombasa died after being trampled during a stampede near Kongowea Market. She was trying to close her stall early.

The 30 injured include a 14-year-old boy hit by a stray canister in Githurai, a boda rider with a fractured leg in Thika, and three police officers injured when protesters threw stones.

These are not statistics. They are people who left home that morning expecting a normal Monday. They did not expect to become part of Kenya’s fuel price history.

The immediate trigger was EPRA’s announcement: super petrol at Ksh 214.25, diesel at Ksh 242.92 for the May 15–June 14 cycle. That is a 23.5% jump in one month, on top of a 24.2% hike in April.

The government blamed the Iran war and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua blamed corruption: “How can we be paying more for fuel than our neighbors when it comes through our own ports?”

For ordinary Kenyans, the cause matters less than the effect. Food prices jumped. Transport fares doubled overnight. Gabriel Odhiambo, 24, told Reuters four tomatoes now cost Ksh 60—triple what they cost last month.

When people feel cornered economically, protests become inevitable. When those protests meet heavy-handed policing, deaths become possible.

By Tuesday morning, May 19, Nairobi was quiet again. Buses were running, but at half capacity. The hashtag #RejectFuelPrices was still trending at number one on X.

The government announced a meeting between the finance, transport, and energy ministers and transport operators to find a solution. Finance Minister John Mbadi said current prices are already subsidized.

But for the families of the four dead, “solution” is too late. For the 30 injured, it is about hospital bills and lost wages.

Human rights groups are demanding independent investigations into the use of force. Amnesty International Kenya said Article 37 protects peaceful assembly, and police must distinguish between protesters and criminals.

The Interior Ministry maintains most of the country remained peaceful and that the violence was caused by “mobilized criminal elements.” Protest organizers say the violence started when police fired tear gas into unarmed crowds.

Kenya has been here before. Fuel protests in 2018. Anti-finance bill protests in 2024. Each time, the pattern repeats: prices rise, people protest, someone dies, a committee is formed, and life moves on.

The question is whether this time is different. Four people died so that the rest of the country could talk about fuel prices without looking away. Thirty are in hospital beds wondering if their injuries will cost them their jobs.

If their deaths become just another line in a news report, then nothing changes. If they become the reason the government sits down with transport operators and actually listens, then maybe something does.

Kenya’s fuel crisis will not be solved by tear gas. And it will not be solved by ignoring the math that makes matatus unviable. It will be solved when policy meets the reality of a mama mboga in Githurai who cannot afford fare to the market.

Until then, four families are burying their dead. Thirty are healing. And the rest of us are left with the question: how many more have to die before we fix the price at the pump?

 

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