Monday, July 14, 2025

WCC NEWS: After string of violent protests, Kenyan churches urge protection of freedoms and rule of law

As Kenyan church leaders seek peace and dialogue, the groups are also demanding justice, the protection of freedoms and rights, and the rule of law, after protests left behind a trail of death, pain, and destruction. 
Kenya Gen-Z converge for a photo at the All Saints Cathedral in Nairobi, after prayers to remember their members who died on June 25 , 2024. Photo: Fredrick Nzwili
11 July 2025

The churches' move comes after youth organized a string of demonstrations to demand government action on corruption, unemployment, high taxation, and police brutality, among other issues. 

Before storming the streets, the youth mobilized through social media. They have marched unarmed, carrying national flags, bottles of water, and mobile phones.

“It is a valid call on the government to lead in a way centered on people’s lived realities, more so, the youth,” said Kevin Maina, a Kenyan Anglican church youth leader who advocates for youth, climate justice, and social change.

Maina is a member of the World Council of Churches Commission on Climate Justice and Sustainable Development.

“The level of accountability on public resources is very low and this continues to bring frustration to a population that can barely take care of its basic needs,” said Maina, adding that churches could continue to hold the government accountable through avenues available to them.

“The protests may not stop soon because the government continues to rule with an iron fist…instead of critically engaging the people on issues affecting them.”

Youth have also been victims of unexplained disappearances, abduction, and extra-judicial killings, something that the church leaders say must be addressed.

Also of concern to church leaders is the violent suppression of protests by riot police and men armed with crude weapons, and the ensuing chaos during which shops and businesses have been looted, innocent civilians attacked, and women raped. For the church leaders, this amounts to a clampdown on the freedom of expression, assembly, and the right to picket.

“[We are] deeply perturbed by the growing trend where the state is blatantly, violently denying Kenyans the right to enjoy the right to picket,” said the Rev. Canon Chris Kinyanjui, general secretary of the National Council of Churches of Kenya.

On 7 July, this pattern of violence and brutality reoccurred during protests called to mark the 35th anniversary of Saba Saba (7,7) a day when Kenyans celebrate the birth of constitutionalism, multiparty democracy, and the rule of law in the country. At least 30 protesters died – most killed by the police, with hundreds of others injured.

“We demand, in line with the constitution and the National Police Service Act, that security agencies provide adequate security to all peace and unarmed demonstrators, ensuring that every Kenyan enjoys the rights and freedoms,” said Kinyanjui.

On June 25, another 16 people died in a protest called by the youth to mark the first anniversary of the anti-tax demonstrations last year, which left at least 60 people dead. In an attempt to break up the massive demonstration, the police used live and rubber bullets, water cannons, and tear gas. Also seen attacking the youth protestors were men armed with whips and clubs.

According to the Kenya Human Rights Commission, 115 people have died and hundreds have been injured in the protests since June last year.

Meanwhile, the Interreligious Council of Kenya, a grouping of Christians, Muslims, Hindu, and Buddhists, warned that the dominant political elite, fighting to acquire, protect, and consolidate political and economic power, was tearing apart the country with unprecedented tension, violence, and killing of innocent citizens.

“Kenya is in a dangerous and bad state…we cannot continue like this,” said Catholic Bishop Willybard Lagho, the council’s chairman, in a statement on July 9, which called on the president to restore public trust. “Politicians must also be compelled to immediately cease using religion and negative ethnicity for political mobilization.”

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The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

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EarthBeat Weekly: Bishops of the Global South, Pope Leo appeal for urgent climate action, ecological conversion

Bishops of the Global South, Pope Leo appeal for urgent climate action, ecological conversion

Your weekly newsletter about faith and climate change

July 11, 2025


Pope Leo XIV celebrates Mass "for the care of creation" on the grounds of the Borgo Laudato Si' ecology center in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, July 9, 2025. (CNS/Cristian Gennari, pool)

In the last two EarthBeat Weekly newsletters, I spoke of NCR environment correspondent Brian Roewe's two-part series on the future of Laudato Si', which looked at the roles Pope Leo XIV and the Vatican as well as grassroot groups of Catholics around the world might play. 

The news events of the first two weeks of July have offered concrete examples of both powerfully moving forward in the spirit of Pope Francis' 2015 encyclical.

On July 1, bishops across the Global South issued an unprecedented appeal for stronger climate action — including an end to fossil fuels — at the U.N. climate conference, COP30, in Belém, Brazil, in November. 

The 34-page letter is the first-ever joint appeal issued by the continental conferences of Catholic bishops in Latin America, Africa and Asia, representing 821 million Catholics. 

"The Church will not remain silent. We will continue to raise our voice alongside science, civil society, and the most vulnerable, with truth and consistency, until justice is done," said the bishops.

Read more: Bishops of Asia, Africa, Latin America unite in unprecedented climate appeal

The next day, the Vatican released Pope Leo XIV's message for the 2025 World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation, celebrated later this year on Sept. 1. This is essentially the new pope's first statement dedicated to environment and climate issues. In it, he quoted Laudato Si' extensively while offering his most expansive reflection on the subject, including environmental justice: 

"Environmental justice — implicitly proclaimed by the prophets — can no longer be regarded as an abstract concept or a distant goal. It is an urgent need that involves much more than simply protecting the environment. For it is a matter of justice — social, economic and human. For believers it is also a duty born of faith, since the universe reflects the face of Jesus Christ, in whom all things were created and redeemed. In a world where the most vulnerable of our brothers and sisters are the first to suffer the devastating effects of climate change, deforestation and pollution, care for creation becomes an expression of our faith and humanity."

Read more: Catholics must respond to environmental injustice with prayer, concrete action, pope says

Then on July 3, the Vatican added a new Mass "for the care of creation" to the Roman Missal. According to Cardinal Michael Czerny, it is a response to "requests for a liturgical way of celebrating the meaning and the message of Laudato Si'." 

Pope Leo XIV celebrated the new Mass for the care of creation for the first time July 9 in the gardens of the papal villa at Castel Gandolfo, where to the accompaniment of chirping birds he said in his homily, "We must pray for the conversion of many people, inside and outside of the church, who still do not recognize the urgency of caring for our common home."

Read more: Pope prays for conversion of those resisting climate action at new Mass

 



 

What else is new on EarthBeat:

 
by Brian Roewe

For religious organizations, loss of the rebates jeopardizes financing options for clean energy projects and is expected to result in millions of dollars less in energy cost savings that could otherwise be reinvested in other church ministries and programs.


 

by Daniel P. Horan

I wonder whether the framing of the liturgy itself in instrumentalizing terms may unintentionally reinscribe problematic views of the relationship between the human and more-than-human world.


 

by Tawanda Karombo

Cardinal Stephen Brislin said amid the threats of climate change that experts say is being fast-tracked by global warming brought about by carbon emissions, there is renewed hope for environmental and climate change awareness among young people in South Africa.


 

by Kimberley Heatherington, OSV News

The June 18, 2015, anniversary of Pope Francis' landmark environmental encyclical Laudato Si' coincided with proposals by Congress to defund America's clean energy investments and pollution reduction programs, sell public lands to industry, establish legal permitting detours for potential polluters, and eliminate federal subsidies for energy-efficient technologies, among other not-so-green actions.


 

by Camillo Barone

Two days after floodwaters tore through Kerr County, Archbishop Gustavo García-Siller installed the new pastor for Kerrville's Notre Dame Parish, in a Mass that was "a powerful sign of how God cares for his people."


 

by Paul Cobler, The Texas Tribune

Water rose fast along the Guadalupe River, causing 68 deaths as of Sunday afternoon. Local officials said they couldn’t have seen it coming.


 

by Jim Vertuno, Julio Cortez, John Seewer, Associated Press

Rescuers maneuvered through challenging terrain as a desperate search for the missing girls stretched into a third day after floodwaters surged into a summer camp. Texans were asked to pray that survivors would be found.


 

by Lauretta Brown, OSV News

At least 20 girls are missing from Christian camp along the Guadalupe River, which rose nearly 30 feet in less than an hour. Authorities confirm 24 dead, and expect more casualties. 


 

by Elisa Johnston

When my daughter told me recycling was a "white mom thing," I knew I was missing the mark on teaching her about why God calls us to care for creation. Here are 5 things I'm now doing differently.


 

What's happening in other climate news:

Democrats and climate groups 'too polite' in fight against 'malevolent' fossil fuel giants, says key senator —Mark Hertsgaard for The Guardian

Debate erupts over role job cuts played in weather forecasts ahead of deadly Texas floods —Michael Biesecker and Brian Slodysko for the Associated Press

Intense downpours like those in Texas are more frequent, but there's no telling where they'll happen —Tammy Webber for the Associated Press

Flood predictions could worsen when Trump's cuts take hold —Scott Waldman and Chelsea Harvey for Politico

Trump hires scientists who doubt the consensus on climate change —Maxine Joselow for The New York Times

Trump's first EPA promised to crack down on forever chemicals. His second EPA is pulling back. —Anna Clark for ProPublica   

Going beyond grass: Turning lawns Into a pollinators' paradise —Karen Mockler for The Revelator

 


Final Beat:

EarthBeat shared in 14 of the 70 Catholic Media Awards earned by National Catholic Reporter this year, with contributions to the packages of stories that received first place awards for Best Coverage — Political IssuesBest Coverage — Racial Inequities and Best Coverage of Ecumenical and Interfaith Issues

EarthBeat's coverage of last year's U.N. climate change conference, COP29, also earned a first place award for Best News Writing Series — International Event.

Both the written and video components of a reporting project completed with grant funding from Solutions Journalism Network for coverage of youth mental health earned recognition: first place for Best Reporting on a Special Age-Group — Young Adults (18-40) and an honorable mention for Best Use of Video on Social Media — Ongoing Series — Diocesan and National News Organizations.

Earthbeat earned four awards in the Best Reporting of Social Justice Issues — Care for God's Creation category first placethird place, and two honorable mentions (one for news and one for commentary). 

Also in the Best Reporting of Social Justice Issues section, EarthBeat earned honorable mentions for coverage of Call to Family, Community and Participation and Solidarity.

NCR environment correspondent Brian Roewe earned an honorable mention for Writer of the Year. And this very EarthBeat Weekly newsletter earned second place for Best National Electronic Newsletter.

Congratulations and thank you to everyone who supports our work sharing faith and climate stories! 

Thanks for reading EarthBeat.


Stephanie Clary
Environment Editor
National Catholic Reporter
sclary@ncronline.org
 


 


 
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Truth and Action Roundup 7.11.25

WCC NEWS: After string of violent protests, Kenyan churches urge protection of freedoms and rule of law

As Kenyan church leaders seek peace and dialogue, the groups are also demanding justice, the protection of freedoms and rights, and the rule...