
Inspector General of Police Douglas Kanja addresses journalists on June 9, 2025 at Central Police Station over the death of Albert Ojwang (inset) in police custody.
Albert Ojwang, a 31-year-old Kenyan blogger, met a grim end in police custody on June 9 after being arrested in Homa Bay for a social media post said to defame Deputy Inspector-General of Police Eliud Lagat.
Hauled 350 kilometres to the Directorate of Criminal Investigations headquarters then to Nairobi’s Central Police Station, the police insist he died after “bashing his head against a cell wall”. His family’s lawyer, Julius Juma, tells a different tale—swollen head, bruised shoulders, battered hands, all screaming foul play.
Barely days earlier, 26-year-old software developer Rose Njeri was slapped with cybercrime charges for creating a web tool that allowed Kenyans to reject the Finance Bill 2025, sparking thousands to take action.
Ojwang’s death stings, and Njeri’s arrest feels like a kick too far. But these aren’t just personal tragedies—they’re flares, lighting up the restless spirit surging through Kenya’s youth. In that sense, the struggles of people like Ojwang aren’t in vain.
These young people aren’t just throwing stones at power; they’re rolling up their sleeves, crafting solutions to fix environmental damage, economic hardships and gaps in governance. Across Kenya and its East African neighbours, youth are stepping up. Their work flows across borders in ways previous generations couldn’t imagine. But the cost is brutal—arrests, deaths, exile.
Kenya’s—and indeed East Africa’s—youth are a different breed. With 70 per cent of East Africans under 30, according to United Nations data, and X in their palms, they connect at high speed. Unlike the 1960s freedom fighters or 1990s democracy crusaders, they use digital tools to ignite action far beyond borders. Kenya’s #RejectFinanceBill2024, which blocked a tax hike, lit sparks in Uganda’s anti-corruption protests.
In Kenya, 29-year-old Elizabeth Wathuti and her Green Generation Initiative have planted 30,000 trees since 2020, reviving Nyeri’s hills and pushing forward Kenya’s 2030 clean energy goals. In Tanzania, 25-year-old Amina Juma and her Buni Hub team built AgriTech, linking 10,000 farmers to markets and raising incomes by 15 per cent. In Uganda, 27-year-old Hilda Nakabuye, through Youth4Climate, pulls five tonnes of plastic from Lake Victoria each year, pressuring councils to act.
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, Lucha (Lutte pour le Changement—Struggle for Change) activist Espoir Ngalukiye, 26, trains 2,000 people in Beni to demand better services. Uganda’s Vanessa Nakate, 28, founder of the Rise Up Movement, installed solar panels in 75 rural schools, impacting 13,000 pupils, and took Africa’s climate concerns to COP25. Back home, 24-year-old Brenda Namata’s startup Wekebere created a low-cost foetal monitor that cut maternal deaths by 20 per cent in rural clinics. In Somalia, 27-year-old Hodan Abdirahman runs EcoStraw, converting farm waste into biodegradable straws, reducing plastic use in Mogadishu cafés by 10 per cent in 2024.
Their collaboration crosses borders. The East African Youth Climate Network, linking Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda, planted 10,000 trees in a single day in 2024—organised over Zoom. The African Youth Digital Assembly connects coders from Kigali and Nairobi, developing tools like M-Health, which helped Ghana monitor hospital beds during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Some draw lessons from further afield. In Brazil, 27-year-old Txai Suruí took on Amazon deforestation, which dries up rivers. Backed by Greenpeace, she used social media to expose illegal loggers and push for policy changes. In India, 26-year-old Disha Ravi led Fridays for Future against deforestation in the Western Ghats, where tree loss fuels deadly heatwaves. Her activism—including school strikes and digital organising—helped win India’s 2070 net-zero pledge.
But the toll is high. Kenya’s 2024 protests over the Finance Bill left 39 young people dead, with police citing “disorder” to justify lethal force. Ojwang’s death sparked demonstrations met with tear gas. Njeri’s arrest highlights the risks of digital activism. In DRC, Lucha’s Mumbere Ushindi, 22, died during a 2022 protest against martial law; 57 more, including youth, were killed in Goma in 2023. Ugandan authorities jailed over 70 young people in 2024 for anti-corruption protests, charging them with “common nuisance”. Activists opposing the East African Crude Oil Pipeline, like Bintomkwanga Raymond, have faced jail time. Exile, too, stalks many; dozens of Lucha members have fled to Uganda and Rwanda.
By 2040, Kenya could go one of two ways. One path leads to a thriving nation, with trees planted, apps built and communities trained, forming the foundations of greener economies and more just systems. But if crackdowns persist and the economy falters, youth may remain sidelined—frustrated, but undeterred. The 40–50 lives lost, and the 50–100 driven into exile, weigh heavily. Yet the projects they started keep the dream alive. Like their peers worldwide, Kenyan youth are planting seeds for a different future—their struggles a bold wager on what comes next.
And one more thing. The fact that Ojwang had to be brought from Homa Bay should tell us how much technology has brought the periphery to the centre.
The author is a journalist, writer, and curator of the "Wall of Great Africans". X@cobbo3.