In a turn of events that would make even the most cynical of gin-soaked hacks raise a glass, eight students have been arrested in Kenya following a school arson that left bodies blackened and dreams smouldering. The fire, which tore through a dormitory in the dead of night, has predictably sparked calls for UK-funded safety audits. Because nothing says 'preventing tragedy' like a flock of clipboard-wielding mandarins flown in from Whitehall, their expense accounts groaning under the weight of first-class flights and "per diems" that could feed a village.
Let us paint a picture: a school in rural Kenya, where classrooms are held together by hope and prayers, where the electricity flickers like a dying candle, and where fire extinguishers are as rare as a politician's sincerity. Into this powder keg strides the British taxpayer, ready to fund a safety audit. Because clearly the problem here is a lack of paperwork, not a lack of basic infrastructure or the simmering rage of adolescents driven to arson by conditions that would make a Dickensian workhouse look like a holiday camp.
These eight students, now cooling their heels in a Kenyan jail, are the obvious scapegoats. They are the symptom, not the disease. The disease is a system that treats schools like prisons, where discipline is enforced with the back of a hand and the only outlet for frustration is a box of matches. But no, let us focus on the audits. Let us produce a thick, leather-bound report, full of recommendations that will be filed, forgotten, and then dusted off when the next inferno occurs.
I have seen these audits in action, friends. I once followed a team of 'safety experts' into a school in Lagos. They spent three days measuring fire exits, photographing extinguishers, and interviewing janitors. Then they flew back to London, wrote a 200-page report, and billed the Nigerian government £500,000. The school burned down six months later. The report was cited in the subsequent inquiry as 'evidence of due diligence.'
So let us demand these audits. Let us send more consultants, more spreadsheets, more meaningless tick-box exercises. Let us ignore the fact that the real solution involves building schools that don't resemble tinderboxes, paying teachers a living wage, and giving children a reason to believe that the future holds more than just another day of chalk dust and despair. But that would require actual investment, not just the appearance of concern. And appearances, as we know, are the currency of the modern world.
In the meantime, I shall raise a glass of questionable airport gin to the eight students. They have given us a story, a scandal, and a thoroughly predictable response. And in doing so, they have reminded us that the world is run by people who would rather audit a disaster than prevent one. Cheers, lads. May your cell have a functioning fire extinguisher.








