OMG! Who is setting Kenya's schools on fire?

Dozens of secondary schools across Kenya
have been deliberately set on fire, but as the authorities struggle to
pinpoint why, fractious relations between pupils, teachers and a
controversial education minister offer clues.
In the last three months, 117 Kenyan schools have been partially burnt by arsonists.
Yet
the arson attacks, which are countrywide, don't seem to correspond to
any of the usual ethnic, geographical or socioeconomic fault lines that
often spark tension in Kenya.
A confidential
report by the police and education ministry seen by AFP identifies a
clear pattern of behaviour in the planning of the crimes, as the
authorities struggle to contain the phenomenon.
The fires "mainly
affect dormitories where students sleep, and appear well coordinated
because so far students have never been caught by the fire, meaning they
escape well in advance with prior knowledge," the report said.
In
response, education minister Fred Matiang'i has held several meetings
with teachers, religious leaders and police, and more than 150 students
have been arrested so far.
But the problem persists: on Thursday night alone, four schools were set on fire.
- Fear and loathing -
Identifying those orchestrating the attacks, or merely proving they might be copycat acts, is proving difficult.
The
media has relayed fears of parents for their children's safety along
with strident editorials condemning the incidents as symptomatic of a
soft touch approach to parenting and education in Kenya today.
"An
education system in which students burn hostels and destroy school
property every day is an indictment of the collective ethos of a nation.
It is a shame and a reflection of a society gone haywire," the Daily Nation newspaper thundered on Thursday.
The government has meanwhile seized upon recent reforms designed to stop epidemic levels of cheating to explain the fires.
They
say the burning schools are retribution from a "cartel" formerly linked
to the country's exam-setting body, which used to profit handsomely
from selling papers and answers.
Questions were exchanged by text messages and on social media, with some sold for around $10.
The cheating ring was dismantled in March 2015 and several senior figures from the government agency were arrested.
Others
blame students themselves, saying they are scared of failing their
exams, and still more point to their parents, whom they characterise as
angry after losing out financially due to the cheating crackdown.
- Ministerial role -
The
role of education minister Matiang'i is also a suspected factor,
following months of complaints from teachers, students and parents
against his tough approach.
Matiang'i has
effectively reduced the length of the school holidays by modifying the
scholastic calendar, and has altered the allocation of funds for school
supplies, angering the education establishment.
He
has carried out surprise visits to schools, publicly taking teachers to
task in a way that has reportedly left them feeling humiliated.
The
minister has earned the nickname "Magufuli" as a result, in reference
to the tight ship administration run by the Tanzanian President John
Magufuli, who has cracked down on ministerial incompetence and wasteful
public spending.
Without any sign of the
government reversing its strict policy on cheating, and Matiang'i still
firmly in place, older students are currently refusing to take their
mock examinations ahead of the real thing in October.
Some told AFP they want the exams delayed to make up for time lost to teachers striking in October 2015.
So
whether or not the arson mystery is solved, the bad blood between all
the actors in this educational saga seems far from over.
OMG! Who is setting Kenya's schools on fire?
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09:23:00
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