Anxious wait for parents after deadly Kenya school fire
Parents are anxiously waiting to learn whether their missing children survived a fire that swept through a boarding school in central Kenya.
On Friday morning, the Ministry of Education confirmed that seventeen students had died, while the deputy president reported that 70 children were still unaccounted for, leaving the final death toll uncertain.
There is speculation that some children may have fled into the local community to escape the blaze, or were picked up by their parents without the school’s knowledge.
The fire broke out in a dormitory at Hillside Endarasha Academy in Nyeri County, and its cause remains unknown.
Over 150 pupils were in the dormitory when the fire started around midnight local time. According to police, the average age of the victims was about nine years old.
When parents were later allowed to view the scene, many of the bodies, still in the devastated building, were too badly burned to be identified.
The sight of the charred remains deepened the horror that they felt. One man had to be supported as he slowly walked back, while a number of women covered their eyes with their shawls and sobbed.
Another woman flailed around wildly, almost as if possessed by grief.
“I want to go where my child is,” she cried. “The bodies I have seen are of big children, my child has died!”
The school is in a remote area. Firefighters were delayed by bad roads, but people living nearby rushed to try and rescue the boys. In the chaos, some went missing.
Angela Kimani told us she couldn’t find her 11-year-old nephew.
She’d been in church attending a late-night vigil when the congregation heard the screams from the school and ran to find it burning.
“When the dormitory was broken, there were some who were rescued, some were unconscious and some were dead,” she said. “We haven’t found him in hospitals, we are wondering if he could be among those who have been burned beyond recognition. It’s such heavy grief for our family.”
John Githogo, the uncle of a missing schoolboy, told journalists that waiting for news was “torture”.
“We are being told some are dead, some ran away, some were picked up by their parents,” he said. “But we didn’t pick our boy.
“We don’t know if he’s among the dead, among the people who ran away.”
In an effort to pin down the children who are still unaccounted for, Kenya’s Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua urged “each and every parent” who had collected their child from the school to report to the authorities, given that 70 pupils were missing.
“We are praying and hoping for the best,” he said.
Fourteen children have been taken to hospital with injuries.
President William Ruto called the fire “horrific” and “devastating”, and has ordered an investigation.
“Those responsible will be held to account,” Mr Ruto wrote on social media.
A team of investigators, including forensics experts, were deployed to the school, police said.
“More bodies are likely to be recovered once [the] scene is fully processed,” police spokesperson Resila Onyango said.
The blaze spread very fast as most of the buildings in the school were made of timber, according to a journalist from Citizen TV, a local TV station.
Local official Samson Mwangi Mwema told the BBC the rescue operation was difficult, saying: “We found the dormitory had caught fire, we tried to rescue – we found some children under the bed and we were able to rescue them.”