Naivas receives Sh134 million insurance payout for protest losses

Business
By Esther Dianah | Feb 11, 2026
CIC CEO Patrick Nyaga (left) signs a dummy  cheque of Sh134,044,452  before giving it to Naivas CEO Andreaas Van Paleske (second right) following claims incurred under Political Violence and Terrorism (PVT) after Gen Z protests last year in June, 2025. [Jenipher Wachie,Standard]

Naivas Supermarket has received compensation of Sh134 million from CIC Insurance Group for its properties damaged during the Gen Z protests on June 25, 2025.

The payout, under a Political Violence and Terrorism (PVT) policy extension, covers claims primarily from the Nyeri branch, mountain mall in Nairobi and Naivasha, which suffered extensive looting and vandalism.

Cumulatively, the insurer has paid the chain store Sh392 million in compensation for damages over the past 12 years—with Sh300 million paid in the last two years because of the protests.

During the cheque handover in Nairobi, the insurer revealed that they currently covered general businesses valued at Sh21 billion.

Naivas Group CEO, Andreas Von Paleske, while receiving the settlement, said the chain store is reliant on working with strong insurance partners to cover a whole array of risks they face day in, day out.

Patrick Nyaga, CIC group managing director and CEO said that risk management is critical for businesses and customers. He reiterated their commitment to de-risk businesses and clients in an evolving business landscape.

Fred Ruoro, CIC general managing director, acknowledged that the claim in question emanated from the mandamano that happened in 2025, where Naivas and other businesses were attacked during the protest. 

“There were massive losses across the board. And when CIC looked at the claims, with our loss of justice, we established the magnitude of the claim was financially Sh134 million,” Ruoro said.

In the 2024 Gen Z protests, Naivas was also affected and the insurer paid a claim of Sh170 million.  

Share this story
Kenya slashes dollar debt to record low as Chinese yuan gains ground
President William Ruto’s administration has reduced the share of its external debt denominated in US dollars to the lowest level on record.
Government plans stricter laws to clean up tea sector
The government is planning tighter regulations to streamline Kenya’s multi-billion-shilling tea sector and protect more than 800,000 farmers from exploitation.
Tourism earnings hit record Sh500 billion as arrivals near 8m
Kenya’s tourism earnings hit a record Sh500 billion in 2025, signalling strong recovery and growth despite recent shocks, including Gen-Z protests and the Covid-19 pandemic.
Kakamega youth, women eye avocado export cash after skills training
Youth and women groups in Kakamega County are increasingly turning to avocado farming as a viable income stream
Portable kitchen: Designer taps into space-saving trend
How a self- taught artist is transforming cooking through a portable kitchen innovation in Thika Town .
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS