EIGHT students alleged to have been involved in a suspected arson attack at a Kenyan girls’ school that killed 16 pupils have been arrested, police say.
The fire in the early hours of Thursday morning at the Utumishi Girls Academy in Gilgil, about 120km (77 miles) north-west of capital city Nairobi, tore through the upper floor of a dormitory which had 135 bunk beds.
After interviews with students and staff and a forensic review of CCTV footage, eight pupils at the school were identified as “persons of interest in connection with the planning and execution” of the fire, the National Police Service said in a statement.
Investigations are continuing into the exact cause of the blaze.
Police said the students were detained for questioning after being traced to their homes and brought back to the school, while others who had remained in the area were also tracked down and detained.
The eight were among 30 students who were initially recalled to the school by detectives investigating the deadly fire.
Regarding the aftermath of the fire, Education Minister Julius Ogamba said preliminary findings indicated that there had been multiple breaches of safety measures at the school, including overcrowding in dormitories and a locked exit door.
“In particular, there was congestion in the dormitory and one exit door was locked, contrary to the prescribed safety requirements,” he said.
He dissolved the school’s board of management and ordered action against the headteacher.
The minister said appropriate disciplinary and legal steps would be taken against anyone found to have failed in their duties.
Shutterstock A two-storey dormitory building. Burn marks can be seen coming up on the external walls of the first floor.Shutterstock
The fire started on the first floor of the dormitory
As investigators continued their work at the site, parents and relatives anxious for news of their loved ones were seen in tears. Security has been heightened around the school as growing crowds of people demand answers and accountability.
“I arrived at the school at 07:00 and three hours later I don’t have any information,” Njuki Nthimba, who is looking for his niece, told the BBC on Friday morning.
“Some officers came from the school and asked the parents to group themselves in three groups. Group one is for parents whose children have been arrested in relation to the incident, group two is parents whose children died, and group three is parents who don’t know where their children are.
“I handed them my niece’s name, and I am now waiting to be told information about her.”
Samuel Githua came to the school to look for his sister.
“I don’t know where my sister is, we’ve been told some children are in hospital, some in the mortuary… Our mother died when we were young, so I have taken care of her like a father and mother. She has been my child,” he added.

