Mob justice continues to claim lives across Kenya, with Interior CS Murkomen revealing that 579 people have been killed since January 2025.
Speaking before the Senate on Wednesday, February 25, 2026, Interior Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen said 845 mob justice incidents were recorded in just over a year, leaving 266 people injured.
The statistics, shared in response to a question from Kisumu Senator Tom Ojienda, highlight how communities sometimes take the law into their own hands, often with deadly results.

Hotspots for Mob Justice
Murkomen’s data shows certain counties are worst affected:
Kiambu – 90 cases, 58 deaths
Nairobi – 85 cases, 55 deaths
Kisumu – 45 cases, 36 deaths
Embu – 51 cases, 33 deaths
Kirinyaga – 39 cases, 28 deaths
Even counties with few cases, such as Marsabit, Taita Taveta, and Tana River, recorded fatalities, showing that no area is immune to mob violence.
Why Mob Justice Is Rising
Murkomen said a mix of factors is driving the rise of mob justice:
- Mistrust in the justice system, many citizens feel police and courts are slow or ineffective
- Social media influence, crime videos often encourage copycat violence
- Youth unemployment and poverty, frustration often turns into violence
- Drug abuse and organized crime, both escalate tensions in communities
“People are taking the law into their own hands because they feel the system is failing them,” Murkomen explained.
Government Measures
To fight mob justice, Murkomen said the government is rolling out a multi-pronged approach:
- Strengthening community policing and local engagement
- Promoting hotlines, like the “Fichua kwa DCI” line (0800 722 203), for reporting suspects
- Improving police training on crowd control, human rights, and investigations
- Expanding forensic and intelligence capabilities at the DCI
- Digitalizing police records for transparency and accountability
- Conducting public awareness campaigns to encourage lawful reporting

The CS warned that mob justice not only causes unnecessary deaths but also erodes public trust in institutions meant to protect citizens.
“Public safety must be upheld through lawful processes. Taking the law into your own hands is not the solution,” Murkomen stressed.
As Kenya heads towards the 2027 general elections, the government says it will continue cracking down on mob justice while trying to rebuild confidence in the justice system.
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