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Precious Talent School Tragedy
Fyatu
#31 Posted : Wednesday, September 25, 2019 3:46:29 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 1/20/2011
Posts: 1,820
Location: Nakuru
Kusadikika wrote:
hardwood wrote:
If govt is always ready to compulsorily acquire land for roads and railways, dams etc how come they cant do the same and get 3 acres of land to put up that school instead of grabbing lenana land? Is this a plot for some individuals to grab lenana land?


There is nothing wrong with acquiring land from Lenana school. You just can't do it without a process.

What part is being acquired?
How much land?
For what purpose?

There must be proper surveying and change of the legal documents showing changes in ownership and boundaries.

If you do it just fuaaa you are inviting an invasion of that land the same way Mau Forest was invaded and grabbed. It starts out like this and soon there will be a kijiji inside Lenana School and then you can't move anyone.



This has already happened in Nairobi school. There is a kijiji behind Kirinyaga and Baringo houses all the way to the football pitch. Check out google maps.
Dumb money becomes dumb only when it listens to smart money
Impunity
#32 Posted : Wednesday, September 25, 2019 9:39:18 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 3/2/2009
Posts: 26,331
Location: Masada
Anybody has a "before" photo of the school?
Portfolio: Sold
You know you've made it when you get a parking space for your yatcht.

hardwood
#33 Posted : Tuesday, October 15, 2019 11:34:12 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 7/28/2015
Posts: 9,562
Location: Rodi Kopany, Homa Bay
Meanwhile in Rwanda....

gazeti wrote:



Private schools in Rwanda are on the verge of closing down due to low patronage. A report by Daily Nation says desperate proprietors who face closure of their institutions are now asking the government to sponsor students in private schools at public rates.
But the government has rejected the idea.


The “problem” started with the government’s twelve-year basic education policy which made public schools affordable and preferable.
According to the report, the Ministry of Education invested hugely in expanding capacity and teaching infrastructure at public schools across the country; introduced the school feeding programme and abolished school fees.


More than 30 private schools are said to have closed indefinitely this year, while others are struggling to stay afloat after losing students to public schools.
School owners told Rwanda Today that even those that had managed to stay open were struggling to meet their operational costs.


“We’ve suffered a sharp decline in the number of students enroled, yet the school has accumulated debt, unpaid salaries and owes arrears to suppliers. It is not clear if the school will re-open,” said Samuel Batamba, the head teacher at College Nkunduburezi in Gakenke District.


Mr Batamba said the school used to have 900 students but now has only 80 students after it failed to attract new students while others enrolled in public schools.

According to statistics from the Ministry of Education, the government owns 460 out of the more than 1,575 schools in the country.
The rest are run by religious bodies with the Catholic church owning 620 schools, the Anglican church 279, Adventist church 22 and Muslim schools are at 16. Another 178 schools are run by parents’ associations and individuals.
The most affected institutions are private boarding schools.


Figures show that students in private schools decreased from 101,510 in 2012 to 79,076 last year while enrolment in public and government-aided schools almost doubled in the same period.

According to John Gasana, the Vice chairman of the Private Schools Association, competing with public schools requires huge capital investment to improve infrastructure, equipment and hiring skilled teachers, something many private schools cannot afford.
2012
#34 Posted : Tuesday, October 15, 2019 7:03:00 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 12/9/2009
Posts: 6,592
Location: Nairobi
I see the owner of the school has been charged with murder. That is a defective charge that will just see him walk free. He did not murder the kids, this was not premeditated, conspiracy or otherwise.

BBI will solve it
:)
tom_boy
#35 Posted : Tuesday, October 15, 2019 10:55:31 PM
Rank: Member

Joined: 2/20/2007
Posts: 767
hardwood wrote:
Meanwhile in Rwanda....

gazeti wrote:



Private schools in Rwanda are on the verge of closing down due to low patronage. A report by Daily Nation says desperate proprietors who face closure of their institutions are now asking the government to sponsor students in private schools at public rates.
But the government has rejected the idea.


The “problem” started with the government’s twelve-year basic education policy which made public schools affordable and preferable.
According to the report, the Ministry of Education invested hugely in expanding capacity and teaching infrastructure at public schools across the country; introduced the school feeding programme and abolished school fees.


More than 30 private schools are said to have closed indefinitely this year, while others are struggling to stay afloat after losing students to public schools.
School owners told Rwanda Today that even those that had managed to stay open were struggling to meet their operational costs.


“We’ve suffered a sharp decline in the number of students enroled, yet the school has accumulated debt, unpaid salaries and owes arrears to suppliers. It is not clear if the school will re-open,” said Samuel Batamba, the head teacher at College Nkunduburezi in Gakenke District.


Mr Batamba said the school used to have 900 students but now has only 80 students after it failed to attract new students while others enrolled in public schools.

According to statistics from the Ministry of Education, the government owns 460 out of the more than 1,575 schools in the country.
The rest are run by religious bodies with the Catholic church owning 620 schools, the Anglican church 279, Adventist church 22 and Muslim schools are at 16. Another 178 schools are run by parents’ associations and individuals.
The most affected institutions are private boarding schools.


Figures show that students in private schools decreased from 101,510 in 2012 to 79,076 last year while enrolment in public and government-aided schools almost doubled in the same period.

According to John Gasana, the Vice chairman of the Private Schools Association, competing with public schools requires huge capital investment to improve infrastructure, equipment and hiring skilled teachers, something many private schools cannot afford.


If the morons who run this country would wake up from their drunken stupor and use NHIF effectively to fund public hospitals, very few so called private hospitals would be left standing, ..... And thats a Fact
They must find it difficult....... those who have taken authority as the truth, rather than truth as the authority. -G. Massey.
Fyatu
#36 Posted : Wednesday, October 16, 2019 8:57:25 AM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 1/20/2011
Posts: 1,820
Location: Nakuru
tom_boy wrote:
hardwood wrote:
Meanwhile in Rwanda....

gazeti wrote:



Private schools in Rwanda are on the verge of closing down due to low patronage. A report by Daily Nation says desperate proprietors who face closure of their institutions are now asking the government to sponsor students in private schools at public rates.
But the government has rejected the idea.


The “problem” started with the government’s twelve-year basic education policy which made public schools affordable and preferable.
According to the report, the Ministry of Education invested hugely in expanding capacity and teaching infrastructure at public schools across the country; introduced the school feeding programme and abolished school fees.


More than 30 private schools are said to have closed indefinitely this year, while others are struggling to stay afloat after losing students to public schools.
School owners told Rwanda Today that even those that had managed to stay open were struggling to meet their operational costs.


“We’ve suffered a sharp decline in the number of students enroled, yet the school has accumulated debt, unpaid salaries and owes arrears to suppliers. It is not clear if the school will re-open,” said Samuel Batamba, the head teacher at College Nkunduburezi in Gakenke District.


Mr Batamba said the school used to have 900 students but now has only 80 students after it failed to attract new students while others enrolled in public schools.

According to statistics from the Ministry of Education, the government owns 460 out of the more than 1,575 schools in the country.
The rest are run by religious bodies with the Catholic church owning 620 schools, the Anglican church 279, Adventist church 22 and Muslim schools are at 16. Another 178 schools are run by parents’ associations and individuals.
The most affected institutions are private boarding schools.


Figures show that students in private schools decreased from 101,510 in 2012 to 79,076 last year while enrolment in public and government-aided schools almost doubled in the same period.

According to John Gasana, the Vice chairman of the Private Schools Association, competing with public schools requires huge capital investment to improve infrastructure, equipment and hiring skilled teachers, something many private schools cannot afford.


If the morons who run this country would wake up from their drunken stupor and use NHIF effectively to fund public hospitals, very few so called private hospitals would be left standing, ..... And thats a Fact



I said it here that Paul Kagame had it all figured out before he took over as president of Rwanda. Clearly he had a plan after observing all bullshit that was going on in Rwanda pre-genocide and came in with a checklist of what to do to solve each and every problem, including changing the national flag. He(Kagame) is a living testament of a leader who has actually drained the swamp or if you like a leader who has drained the stinking abscess common in shithole nations. I don't see Kenya getting such a leader in the next 100 years not unless the situation becomes so dire that the citizens themselves take the law into their hands and drain the swamp themselves.

Dumb money becomes dumb only when it listens to smart money
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