@NjeriMania@KatheuNzyimi Hell na..
Katheu ako na body sexy.. idk how to explain it lakini Huyu amekonda sana😭
Alafu katheu si keusi hivyo.. not in a bad way fr
MINISTRY PROBE EXPOSES FINANCIAL IRREGULARITIES AND CALLS FOR DISSOLUTION OF ALLIANCE GIRLS HIGH SCHOOL BOARD
The Ministry of Education has recommended the dissolution of the Board of Alliance Girls High School following an investigative assessment that uncovered serious financial mismanagement, including approval of inflated school fees and unrealistic expenditures.
In letters dated 29th April 2026, Cabinet Secretary Julius Migosi Ogamba directed action against both the school board and Principal Margaret Njeru. The Ministry’s Quality Assurance and Standards Directorate conducted the probe on 28th April 2026.
KEY FINDINGS FROM THE MINISTRY REPORT
The investigation revealed that the Board approved a FY 2025/2026 budget with 2026 fees set at Ksh 120,179 per student - far exceeding the government-approved amount of Ksh 53,554. This created an excess of approximately Ksh 13,000,000 that the school was tasked to address.
The approved budget included several non-essential and unrealistic expenditure items:
• Moral and spiritual activities: Ksh 1,100,000
• Annual trips: Ksh 16,000,000
• Prize giving/speeches: Ksh 13,000,000
• Prize vouchers/sweets/examiners: Ksh 5,000,000
• Airtime/administrative allowance: Ksh 3,000,000
One notable example cited was the Board’s approval on 16th October 2025 to spend Ksh 25,000,000 on a five-day staff trip to Dubai.
The Ministry has instructed the Regional Director of Education for the Central Region to present the report to the County Education Board for consideration and appropriate action, including possible dissolution of the Board under the Basic Education Act, 2013.
Separately, the Ministry recommended that the TSC institute disciplinary action against Principal Margaret Njeru for presiding over the implementation of the unauthorised fees structure violating Section 29(2)(b) of the Basic Education Act.
DEEPER ALLEGATIONS OF A “MAFIA SYSTEM”
Internal reports have emerged from teachers and parents linking a small group of powerful individuals - including the Principal, two deputies (Administration and Academics), and select board members - operating as an entrenched “mafia system” that controls key school decisions and revenue streams.
Irregular Practices Include:
• OVER-ADMISSION FOR PROFIT: The Ministry allocated around 600 Form 1 slots, but the school admitted 700 students, with some slots reportedly “sold” at a minimum of Ksh 150,000 each.
• PHONE BOOTH MONOPOLY: Over 20 school phones are operated as a revenue-generating business charging Ksh 20 per minute, with students barred from using teachers’ phones. Proceeds are claimed to support needy students, but no transparent records are reportedly available.
• FAVORITISM AND VICTIMISATION: Teachers who question financial dealings or overcrowding are allegedly sidelined, denied favorable classes, or targeted with disciplinary measures. New administrators are reportedly pressured to join the system.
• POOR LEARNING CONDITIONS: Class sizes have ballooned to 70 students against a recommended maximum of 55, making effective implementation of the CBC curriculum difficult. Dormitories are severely overcrowded.
• DOUBLE STANDARDS IN DISCIPLINE: Cases involving students from influential families or staff aligned with the administration are allegedly handled leniently, while others face harsh punishment.
Concerns have also been raised about unaddressed issues of substance abuse, truancy, and alleged inappropriate relationships.
Board members are accused of overstaying their terms - some up to 15 years - further entrenching the alleged irregularities.
PUBLIC REACTION AND NEXT STEPS
The revelations have sparked concern among parents, alumni, and education stakeholders, with many questioning how a school of Alliance Girls’ national prestige fell into such mismanagement.
The school’s motto, “Walk in the Light,” stands in stark contrast to the current allegations of opacity, favoritism, and financial impropriety.
We have various disagreements with my senior brother @rigathi whom I respect and we have come from far. We are both senior leaders in our community. But we also strongly agree on some issues. Here is one of them
You people don't see [politics blinds folks] the transformation of a human being from frame 1 to 2? What message are we sending to that kid in Soweto, mathare, etc, etc , etc. That they can't become who they yearned to be while politically disagreeing? @Honeyfarsafi
Heartbreaking to see suicide cases rising in Kenya, especially among the youth. Every few posts on TikTok and I come across a death by suicide. Mental Health Awareness Month is reminding us how much pain people are carrying in silence — money problems, pressure, depression, and that heavy stigma.
We need to do better. Let’s actually talk about mental health, make counseling accessible, train more professionals, and support hotlines like Befrienders Kenya (0722 178 177).
If you’re struggling, please reach out.
Today we gathered in Kilimani to memorialize a man's legacy on Galana road.
It was a gathering of friends who walked with him through decades of struggle, fellow human rights defenders who stood beside him in courtrooms and in conscience, and his beloved widow Viloo, whose quiet strength and partnership made so much of his work possible.
Pheroze Nowrojee was a Senior Counsel, poet, defender of the Constitution, and a dear friend.
When the Moi government was arresting, detaining, and torturing protestors in the 1980s and 1990s, Pheroze walked into those courtrooms and stood beside political detainees, activists, journalists, and opposition leaders that no one else would touch, among them Koigi wa Wamwere and Raila Odinga, whose detentions without trial were a grim hallmark of that era.
He challenged the constitutionality of sedition laws, he questioned detention without trial, and through his collective efforts with a generation of fearless lawyers, we laid much of the legal groundwork for Kenya's eventual return to multiparty democracy. The democracy we enjoy today has his fingerprints on it.
He spent his life standing for justice when it was costly, defending the rule of law when it was inconvenient, and doing it all with a quiet brilliance and humanity that left everyone who encountered him changed.
Today, his name is beyond the courtrooms and constitutions; it is on a road.
Pheroze was more than a legal giant, he was my mentor, a guide, and a friend. I carry his teachings with me as we continue to strive for the Kenya he believed in and gave his life to build.
Asante, Pheroze. Nairobi will carry your name forward.
@AfricaFirsts You say there's smuggling and illegal immigration upon which the wall was the basis of the construction. Then you proceed to say:- Africa building walls against Africa. Rubbish 🗑 🚮
South Africa 🇿🇦 is building a massive border wall against Mozambique 🇲🇿 to stop car smuggling and illegal immigration.
Africa building walls against Africa.