Eastleigh traders protest continued harassment by police
The traders appealed for the government's intervention, saying the raids have cost them millions of shillings.
Traders in Eastleigh, a key business hub in Nairobi, took to the streets on Thursday to protest against alleged harassment by the police, who have raided their businesses on accusation of stocking contraband milk.
Waving placards and chanting slogans, the traders appealed for the government's intervention, saying the raids have cost them millions of shillings.
More To Read
- Residents demand action as borehole drilling company renders Yusuf Haji Avenue impassable
- Safaricom’s Ndoto Zetu initiative elevates maternal health in Kamukunji's Eastleigh with bed donation
- Eastleigh residents slam City Hall over shoddy repairs on Athumani Kipanga Street, demand permanent fix
- Mahiza Cafe and Bakery: Eastleigh’s chocolate and dessert factory serving pistachio dreams, boba, and halal elegance
- How Eastleigh rewrote its colonial name into a Kenyan-Somali powerhouse
- Eastleigh man transforms neglected 13th Street roundabout into flourishing maize farm

A spot check by The Eastleigh Voice found many wholesale shops along Kipande Athumani Street closed.
Thursday's demonstration came a week after businessmen in the area criticised law enforcement officers who conducted raids that led to chaos as residents protested the move.
Last Tuesday, a contingent of officers was deployed to restore order following a raid by a multi-agency team on shops suspected of selling counterfeit milk and milk products.
Plainclothes officers from the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) and the National Police Service broke into stores on Mukuyu Avenue, Third Avenue, and Yusuf Haji Avenue.

The business community decried the "unwarranted" monthly raids on shops, putting the spolight on the police, whom they said used live bullets to disperse the protests.
The business people accused the police of breaking into their stores without a search warrant an proper identification, and confiscating goods worth millions of shillings. They also said the officers did not state the purpose of the raids.
Further, the demonstrators denied the claim that they were selling contraband goods.

Following last week's raids and demonstrations, Kamukunji MP Yusuf Hassan addressed the matter in Parliament, raising concerns about the conduct of the police officers, which he noted contradicted the rules of the National Police Service (NPS).
The MP formally requested a statement from the Interior ministry.
Top Stories Today
Reader Comments
Trending
