- Source: St. Kizito massacre
St. Kizito was a coeducational boarding secondary school in Meru County, Kenya, named after Saint Kizito. It closed down in 1991, following a high-profile rape and massacre of girls at the school.
Background
The school was established as an all-boys school in 1968 and began admitting girls in 1975.
By 1991 the school had 577 students between the ages of 14 and 18 – 306 boys and 271 girls.
Mass rapes and murders
= Events
=On 13 July 1991, 71 girls were raped and 19 killed at St. Kizito school. After supposedly declining to participate in a strike organized by the boys at the school, the girls' dormitory was invaded by male students and the chaos began.
= Response
=Initial reports included a statement from the deputy principal, Joyce Kithira, who said "The boys never meant any harm against the girls. They just wanted to rape." Kithira was dismissed from her position for her "failure to maintain discipline" at the school but was almost immediately reinstated. School principal James Laiboni commented that rape was a common occurrence at the school. The view was echoed by Francis Machira Apollos, a local probation officer.
The school was closed immediately after the massacre as international outrage erupted on the treatment of women in Kenya and other African nations. 39 boys were arrested in connection with the incident.
See also
Education in Kenya
List of schools in Kenya
List of attacks related to secondary schools
References
= Citations
== Bibliography
=Kariuki, Wanjiru (2004). "Masculinity and Adolescent Male Violence: A Case of Three Secondary Schools in Kenya". Retrieved 14 November 2023. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
Ngesa, Mildred (13 July 2005). "Kenya: 14 Years Later, Boys At the Heart of the St Kizito Tragedy Speak Out". Daily Nation. Retrieved 14 November 2023.
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