Al Jazeera Exposes Ruto’s Government For Illegal Surveillance On Kenyans (Video)
President William Ruto’s administration is facing intense global and domestic scrutiny following explosive allegations that the government has weaponized advanced, illegal digital surveillance tools against ordinary citizens and political critics.
A hard-hitting investigative feature aired on Al Jazeera’s The Listening Post on Monday, May 25, 2026, revealed that the state has sharply amplified its eavesdropping capabilities since the historic 2024 anti-government demonstrations. The disclosure has heightened anxieties over the collapse of civil liberties and democratic safeguards as the country marches toward the 2027 General Election.
Security Tools Turned Against Civilians
The Al Jazeera report painted a grim picture of Kenya’s contemporary political landscape. It detailed how sophisticated surveillance technologies—originally procured under the guise of national security, intelligence gathering, and counterterrorism—have reportedly been repurposed to track, monitor, and intimidate human rights defenders, independent journalists, opposition voices, and ordinary citizens suspected of organizing dissent.
Human rights analysts contend that the unprecedented, youth-led Gen Z protests of 2024 marked a permanent, aggressive shift in the state’s approach to domestic dissent, prompting a quiet but massive expansion of the digital panopticon to map out decentralized networks.
A Paradigm Shift in Kenyan Organizing
According to human rights advocate Victor Ndede, the 2024 demonstrations completely blindsided the state machinery because they did not follow Kenya’s traditional, predictable blueprints of political mobilization.
“The 2024 protests were a pivotal moment in Kenya’s protest organising,” Ndede noted during the Al Jazeera broadcast. “It was the first time we were having youth-led protests because predominantly, protests have been organised either by political leadership or what you would call tribal leadership.”
Because the historic movement was leaderless, highly decentralized, and organically engineered on digital platforms like X and TikTok, the state allegedly pivoted heavily toward sweeping digital surveillance to unmask, profile, and neutralize key online influencers and coordinators behind closed doors. With international watchdogs now sounding the alarm, the Ruto administration faces growing pressure to account for its cyber-intelligence operations ahead of a high-stakes electoral cycle.
Watch the documentary below;
