Which law were Kindiki and Murkomen teaching?

A family lost a son, a hawker, on the streets of Nairobi after he was shot by a police officer in the head at close range.
Boniface Mwangi Kariuki’s death fits into a disturbing and unacceptable pattern in which Kenyans have been losing lives to police brutality.
What’s most shocking is the attitude of the police, who seem undeterred despite demands from citizens for restraint.
Police commanders have also not called to account the junior officers responsible for the misconduct.
Police commanders are either abetting or condoning the commission of crime by their charges. President William Ruto has taken to threats and blame games.
Security agencies have linked former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua to the June 25 protests that almost paralysed the country and saw destruction of public assets, including police stations and government vehicles.
If the government was keen on addressing the issue, it should have arrested those said to be responsible and presented them in a court of law.
Instead of grand-sounding addresses from SUV rooftops, State officials should take action.
Interior Cabinet Secretary staged a catwalk in the city to “assess” the magnitude of the damage from looters and arsonists and issued a shoot-to-kill order.
This raises the question: Which law was he teaching in his day as a university lecturer?
Another law scholar, Prof Kithure Kindiki, has also been making outlandish declarations that seem to encourage violation of the Constitution to protect “national interest”.
There is clear mischief in his new “national interest” narrative, which he deploys to justify State aggression against citizens and police misconduct.
State officials mandated to protect people’s constitutional rights and the rule of law are encouraging impunity among security agents.
And Kenyans need to be vigilant, because Parliament is processing proposed law changes that, if enacted, might make it extremely difficult for citizens to exercise the right to assembly and picketing.
More importantly, the government should listen and address issues being raised, youth unemployment, corruption, higher education funding, taxation, abductions and extrajudicial killings.
Otherwise, the country is descending into anarchy.