Four killed in protests over Kenya fuel price hikes as strike strands commuters

  • Summary

  • Nationwide transport strike strands commuters, blocks roads in Nairobi and other towns

  • Fuel price hikes driven by Middle East conflict, raising living costs and transport fares

  • Finance Minister John Mbadi ​says officials to meet transport operators to seek solution

NAIROBI, May 18 (Reuters) - Four people were ‌killed in protests against fuel price hikes prompted by the Iran war in several Kenyan towns on Monday, its interior minister said, after a nationwide public transport strike stranded commuters.

The Transport Sector Alliance said on Sunday that ​vehicles affiliated with its member associations would stop operating from midnight in protest, while ​police said they would act to tackle any disruptions.

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“We lost four Kenyans ⁠in today’s violence, which also saw more than 30 people injured,” Interior Minister Kipchumba Murkomen ​told a televised press conference.

Kenya’s Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority last week raised retail fuel prices by ​as much as 23.5% - after hiking them by 24.2% last month - as the conflict in the Middle East squeezed global oil and gas supplies.

On Monday morning, roads into the capital Nairobi were blocked by striking transport operators and ​scattered groups of protesters.

Police fired tear gas in some areas while some protesters lit tyres ​to cut access to key roads, worsening congestion and leaving many commuters stranded.

Kenyan comedian and social activist Eric Omondi offloads empty plastic cans along the central business district as he protests rising fuel costs, linked to global supply pressures following the war in Iran, in Nairobi, Kenya May 18, 2026. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab

In Mombasa, Kenya’s main port city, ‌the strike ⁠raised fears of supply-chain delays.

Murkomen said the finance, transport and energy ministers were meeting with public transport operators later on Monday to discuss a solution, while Finance Minister John Mbadi had said earlier on Monday that the current prices were already subsidised.

Kenya imports nearly all its fuel ​products from the Middle ​East via government-to-government deals ⁠with Gulf suppliers. The fuel price hike has sharply raised transport fares and pushed up the cost of basic goods, deepening pressure on households ​already struggling with the high cost of living.

Public relations worker Gabriel ​Odhiambo, 24, said ⁠his transport costs had doubled and that food prices had also risen. Four tomatoes now cost 60 shillings (50 U.S. cents) - a threefold increase.

Kenya raised the pump price of super petrol in Nairobi to ⁠214.25 ​Kenyan shillings ($1.66) a litre from 206.97, and diesel to 242.92 ​shillings from 196.63 for the May 15-June 14 cycle, while kerosene was unchanged at 152.78 shillings.

($1 = 129.2000 Kenyan shillings)

Reporting by ​Humprey Malalo; Writing by Vincent Mumo Nzilani; editing by Ammu Kannampilly, Kevin Liffey and Chiara Rodriquez

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