The Kenyan government has charged four students with murder following a devastating school fire that killed 67 pupils. Sources confirm the accused, aged between 14 and 17, face capital charges under Kenya's penal code. The blaze ripped through a dormitory at Moi Girls High School in Nairobi last week, trapping victims in a locked building.
Uncovered documents from the school's maintenance logs show fire extinguishers had not been inspected in 18 months. British forensic teams, including specialists from Scotland Yard, have been dispatched to assist with evidence recovery. This is not a random tragedy.
It is a chain of failures and negligence. The school's head teacher and four other staff have been suspended. A government spokesperson stated, 'We will pursue justice relentlessly.
' But parents demand accountability beyond the students. The British Foreign Office confirmed the aid is part of a longstanding bilateral agreement on forensic cooperation. This case reeks of institutional rot.
The fire started at 2 AM. The doors were locked. The extinguishers were empty.
Now children face murder charges while the system burns on.









