Protesters call on Kenyan government to halt femicide crisis
Thousands of Kenyans, primarily women, marched through Nairobi to protest the rising tide of femicide and child disappearances. Organized by the End Femicide movement and other advocacy groups, the demonstration demanded the government declare gender-based violence a national crisis.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedThousands of Kenyans, primarily women, marched through Nairobi to protest the rising tide of femicide and child disappearances. Organized by the End Femicide movement and other advocacy groups, the demonstration demanded the government declare gender-based violence a national crisis. The protest was galvanized by the recent brutal murder of gospel singer Rachel Wandeto. Lobby groups have issued a 40-day ultimatum to the Kenyan government, threatening nationwide protests if action is not taken. The Federation of Women Lawyers in Kenya reports receiving approximately 70 gender-based violence cases weekly.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedFormer Chief Justice David Maraga joined the march, lending his voice to calls for stronger government action.
The Federation of Women Lawyers in Kenya reports receiving roughly 70 gender-based violence cases every week across its three offices.
The gospel singer Rachel Wandeto was doused with petrol and set on fire by three men on May 16, dying two days later.
Thousands of Kenyans marched through central Nairobi demanding the government declare a national crisis over rising cases of femicide and child disappearances.
Advocacy groups have given the Kenyan government 40 days to intervene to deal with the plague of gender-based violence.