Google – AFP, Daniel Wesangula (AFP), 14 May 2013
![]() |
Policemen
try to block a sow and its piglets from outside parliament in
Nairobi on May
14, 2013 (AFP, Simon Maina)
|
NAIROBI —
Kenyan demonstrators released two dozen piglets at the gates of parliament and
poured blood on the pavement Tuesday to protest demands by newly elected
lawmakers for a wage hike.
Police, who
fired tear gas to disperse the protestors and beat others with truncheons,
scurried after the pigs as they scampered through the grassy area surrounding
the parliament.
"We
will not allow members of parliament to increase their salaries at will,"
shouted one of the protest organisers Okiya Omtatah.
"They
are greedy just like the pigs we have brought here," Omtata added.
![]() |
People
march towards parliament in
Nairobi during the protest against
MPs pay rises on
May 14, 2013
(AFP, Tony Karumba)
|
"Kenya
is not a banana republic. This premise should be respected," Linturi told
reporters as he made his way into parliament, adding that lawmakers had "a
right to their opinions, even if they do not please everyone."
The bill is
the first act of Kenya's lawmakers since their election in March 4 polls.
Kenyan
lawmakers are already some of the best paid on the continent, although their
tax-free monthly salary of some $13,000 (10,000 euro) in the previous
parliament has been cut to around $7,000.
The wages
were cut after recommendations by the salaries commission, the body MPs now
wish to close.
"This
will not end today, it will continue until action is taken, Kenyans are
angry," said Maina Kiai, another protestor, as colleagues dumped jerry
cans of pig guts at the entrance to parliament.
![]() |
Protestors
carry piglets to the gates of
parliament in Nairobi on May 14, 2013
(AFP, Tony
Karumba)
|
At least 10
people were arrested.
"We
are trying to bring back sanity, we already have some of the demonstrators in
custody," district police chief Patrick Oduma said.
In January,
lawmakers voted themselves a $107,000 send-off bonus -- their last work before
parliament closed ahead of elections -- after earlier efforts to grant
themselves the windfall were vetoed by the then President Mwai Kibaki.
That effort
too was blocked.
Police
finally rounded up the pigs and loaded them onto a waiting lorry, but it was
unclear what happened to them next.



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