Kenyans are not suffering because fuel is naturally expensive. Kenyans are suffering because the price of fuel has been turned into a tax machine by a government that keeps demanding more from citizens while giving them less in return.
Across East Africa, Kenya remains among the most painful places to fuel a car, run a boda boda, operate a matatu, transport food, or keep a small business alive. Petrol at about Sh206 per litre and diesel at about Sh206 per litre is not just a number at the pump. It is the price of bread. It is the price of school fees. It is the price of rent. It is the price of unga, vegetables, milk, electricity, transport, and survival.
The tragedy is that Kenyans are not only paying for fuel. They are paying for taxes, levies, waste, corruption, bad decisions, and a government appetite that never gets full. Every litre of fuel carries the pain of the ordinary citizen. Every refill is a reminder that the people are being squeezed to finance a system that too often leaks public money through theft, inflated tenders, wastage, and political luxury.
This is why the anger is growing. Kenyans can see what is happening. They are told to tighten their belts while leaders live large. They are told to be patient while scandals break every day. They are told taxes are necessary, yet the same taxes are not reflected in better roads, better hospitals, better schools, cheaper food, or a more dignified life.
Fuel is the heartbeat of the economy. When fuel goes up, everything goes up. Farmers pay more to move produce. Traders pay more to restock. Parents pay more for fare. Employers pay more to operate. Workers carry the burden through higher prices and stagnant incomes. The boda boda rider, the mama mboga, the matatu driver, the teacher, the nurse, the small shop owner and the unemployed youth all feel the same pressure.
That is why this is no longer just an economic issue. It is a political issue. It is a governance issue. It is a question of whether citizens exist to serve government, or government exists to serve citizens.
Kenyans are tired of being treated like an endless revenue source. They are tired of paying more while corruption remains normal. They are tired of fuel taxes being defended with lectures while ordinary people cannot afford to move, buy food, or run businesses. They are tired of a government that raises the cost of living and then acts surprised when the people complain.
The message is now clear: lower the cost of fuel, reduce the tax burden, stop the theft of public resources, and respect the people’s pain.
If the government will not listen to the people, Kenyans are ready to speak from the streets. The streets are becoming the last court of public accountability because the cost of living has crossed the line. This is not noise. This is survival.
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