Police also fired tear gas at media covering the protest. The protests were sparked by allegations that around $50 million has been diverted from the health ministry. The government says no funds have been lost and that details reported last week by the Business Daily Newspaper are based on an incomplete audit report.
Such scandals are putting public pressure on Kenyatta, who is seeking re-election next year with the pledge to eradicate corruption. Kenya is among the world's most corrupt countries, ranking 139 out of 168 countries in a 2015 index by Transparency International.
Kenyans are tired of corruption in East Africa's biggest economy and want change, said Boniface Mwangi, an organizer of the event. "It's a shameful day when police are unleashed on peaceful protesters," he said. "The president is endorsing corruption by the state, unleashing police on anti-corruption demonstrators who were presenting a petition to his office outlining the ways he can fight corruption."
Separately, parliament continued a public inquiry into the alleged theft of $16 million by businessmen in collusion with officials of the ministry of devolution and planning. Philip Kinisu, the former chairman of the country's anti-corruption watchdog, the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission, said earlier this year that Kenya loses 30 percent of its budget to corruption.
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