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Mother narrates how police shot her son using live bullets during MMU demos

Victor Kariuki, a first-year journalism student, is also admitted with a bullet lodged in his spinal cord.

by Collins Wanzallah
11th June 2026
in Main Story, News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Families of Multimedia University students who were shot by police on Monday during a protest now want the officers who fired live ammunition on scholars be identified and be interdicted.

At least four students were seriously injured during the protest with two of them nursing gunshot wounds at Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi.

It is reported that the protests erupted over a staff strike and the suspension of examinations where students accused lecturers of refusing to give them exams while they were ready.

One of the students, Abubakar Fugicha, a third-year finance student who has a live bullet, lodged in his oesophagus.

Victor Kariuki, a first-year journalism student, is also admitted with a bullet lodged in his spinal cord.

“I was trying to get away when I felt something hit my back. I fell to the ground immediately, and there was blood coming out. I couldn’t move, and people had to carry me to safety,” Kariuki shared

His mother Alice Wanjiku who spoke after visiting him at Kenyatta National Hospital said it was painful to watch her son in pain in hospital.

“It is so heartbreaking experience for any parent to see you child in such condition, he was shot at the back and a bullet is lodge around his spine,” the mother said

Adding,” the doctors have said if they hurriedly remove the bullet, his life could be ruined thus they must study how to do it, I am just praying that he comes out of danger because he is in pain,”

Vocal Africa, a human rights organisation in Nairobi has since condemned the shooting calling out the police for using excessive force on students who were exercising their right.

” We also stand firmly with the students of Multimedia University. Article 37 of the Kenyan Constitution empowers every citizen to voice their concerns through peaceful assembly,” Hussein Khallid the Executive Director of Vocal Africa said

Adding, “To the police, we say: you must respect the lives of Kenyan citizens. There are many peaceful ways to handle demonstrations instead of using weapons. We must strongly condemn the use of excessive force in this case,”

According to the students, police officers in plainclothes suspected to be from Hardy stormed into the university compound and started shooting aimlessly.

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