• Press Release

Kenya: Meta Can be Sued in Kenya for Role in Ethiopia Conflict   

April 3, 2025

(EARO)

In response to the High Court ruling that it has jurisdiction to hear and consider the merits of the case, in which Meta is accused of promoting content that led to ethnic violence and killings in Ethiopia from 2020 to 2022, Mandi Mudarikwa, Head of Strategic Litigation at Amnesty International, said:  

“Today’s ruling is a positive step towards holding big tech companies accountable for contributing to human rights abuses. It paves the way for justice and serves notice to big tech platforms that the era of impunity is over. 

“Communities and individuals affected by corporate human rights abuses committed by multinationals often struggle to access justice, in part because companies like Meta can use their terms of service to restrict jurisdiction to courts out of reach of many victims. 

“This ruling offers hope that marginalized groups can access justice no matter where they are in the world. The idea of looking at countries outside the US and Europe as mere markets where profits can be made in the absence of accountability must be challenged.  

“It’s time for these platforms to abide by their responsibilities and prioritize human rights over profit.” 

Background  

The case filed against Meta raises substantial questions of law regarding Facebook’s use of algorithms and its impact on rights protected by Kenya’s Bill of Rights and broadly in international and human rights law. Since Courts in Kenya are vested with jurisdiction to determine whether a right has been violated and to interpret the constitution among other things, the Court confirmed that it had jurisdiction to hear the matter on this basis. The Court went on to say that, as stipulated by section 165 of the Constitution of Kenya, such cases that raise substantial issues of law must be heard by an uneven number of judges therefore the matter has now been sent to the Chief Justice for emplacement or the appointment of the judges to hear the matter. After the Court handed down its decision, Meta’s legal representatives asked for the Court’s permission to appeal and continuing to seek dismissal of the petition. 

Ethiopians, Abrham Meareg and Fisseha Tekle, an Amnesty International researcher, together with The Katiba Institute, accuse Meta, Facebook’s parent company, of promoting harmful content during the armed conflict in northern Ethiopia from November 2020 to November 2022.