Parents have been waiting anxiously to find out if their missing children are still alive after a boarding school in central Kenya caught fire.
Seventeen pupils were confirmed dead by the Ministry of Education on Friday morning, while the deputy president said 70 children were still missing, so the death toll could not be verified.
It is thought some of these children may have run into the local community to escape the fire, or were picked up by their parents without the school knowing.
The blaze took place in a dormitory at Hillside Endarasha Academy, in Nyeri county, and its cause is currently unknown.
More than 150 pupils were in the dormitory when it caught fire at around midnight local time. The average age of the victims was about nine years old, according to the police.
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John Githogo, the uncle of a missing schoolboy, told journalists in Nyeri that waiting for news was “torture”.
“We are being told some are dead, some ran away, some were picked by their parents.
“But we didn’t pick our boy. We don’t know if he ran away,” Mr Githogo said in exasperation.
“We don’t know if he’s among the dead, among the people who ran away. It’s torture.”
Francis Wachira, who has a daughter at the school, told the AFP news agency that there has been “very little information”.
“They are telling us some children escaped but we are not being told to where,” he said.
In an effort to pin down the children who are still unaccounted for, Kenya’s Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua urged “each and every parent” who had collected their child from the school to report to the authorities, given that 70 pupils were missing.
“We are praying and hoping for the best,” he said.
Fourteen children have been taken to hospital with injuries.
President William Ruto called the fire “horrific” and “devastating”, and has ordered an investigation.
“Those responsible will be held to account,” Mr Ruto wrote on social media.
The blaze spread very fast as most of the buildings in the school were made of timber, according to a journalist from Citizen TV, a local TV station.
Earlier, police spokesperson Resila Onyango told AFP that bodies recovered were “burnt beyond recognition”.
“More bodies are likely to be recovered once [the] scene is fully processed,” she said.
Firefighters put out the fire with the help of people living nearby, who were the first to respond.
Local official Samson Mwangi Mwema told the BBC the rescue operation was difficult, saying: “We found the dormitory had caught fire, we tried to rescue – we found some children under the bed and we were able to rescue them.”
People standing in front of the school building
Image source,Ephantus Maina
Image caption,
An investigation into the fire has been promised by the presidency
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) told the BBC it was operating a temporary trauma centre at the school and giving counselling to 59 children.
Hillside Endarasha Academy is a private primary school near Nyeri town – 150km (93 miles) north of the capital, Nairobi.
The Kenyan Ministry of Education said the school had 824 pupils – 402 boys and 422 girls. Of the total, 316 were boarders.
The government would assist families with burials and help with hospital bills, Mr Gachagua said.
He added that a report into the causes of the fire would be made public once completed.
School fires are relatively common in Kenyan boarding schools, where concerns have been raised about safety standards.
In 2022, a dormitory in western Kenya burnt down, with several students later arrested on suspicion of arson. The year before, there was a spike in the number of arson attacks on boarding schools.
In 2017, 10 students died in an arson attack at Moi Girls High School in the capital Nairobi.
At least 67 students died in Machakos County, south-east of Nairobi, in the deadliest Kenyan school arson that took place more than 20 years ago.