APPEALS FOR HELP

Brilliant girl crushing stones after failing to join high school

Sera scored 405 marks and was set to join Moi Girls High in Isinya

In Summary
  • Sera’s former classmates, Mary Kulola Gilbert and Esther Wanyinya, have also failed to join Mwasere Girls  as their parents are unable to afford the fees.
  • The twin sisters from Kanagoni area within Adu ward are appealing to well-wishers to assist them report to school.
Education CS Ezekiel Machogu during the release of 2022 KCSE results.
FORM 1 ADMISSION: Education CS Ezekiel Machogu during the release of 2022 KCSE results.
Image: FILE

A sixteen-year-old girl who scored 405 marks in Magarini subcounty of Kilifi county has turned to crushing stones to raise her fees and assist her family put food on the table.

Sera Kauchi Naftali has, however, lost hope of ever joining her dream school—Moi Girls High School, Isinya—where she was offered a Form 1 slot but is yet to report due to lack of school fees.

The former pupil at Bandacho Primary School in Adu ward of Magarini constituency that produced 17 candidates with 400 marks and above is worried that her place at the school in Kajiado county will be taken by another student.

The deadline for Form 1 students to report  was on Tuesday.

Sera requires Sh75,789 to report.

She is among four candidates from the Bandacho Primary with more than 400 marks who have not been able to take their places in the schools they have admission letters from.

Despite applying for scholarships from organisations such as Equity Bank’s Wings to Fly and the Elimu Scholarship programmes and a promise from Kilifi county government, the bright girl did not get any assistance and spends her time weeping as she handles household chores.

The last born in a family of seven has resigned to the menial job of crushing stones to make ballast for sale alongside her mother, Mariam Rodgers, but what they get is hardly enough to even put food on the table.

Journalists found the girl at a quarry about one kilometre from her former school crushing stones together with her mother. Though she put on a brave face and forced a smile, her worries were evident.

Sera and her mother appealed to well-wishers to come to their aid and enable the girl to go to school since Sera’s father is also unemployed.

Bandacho Primary School head teacher Constance Kanze Mwaria said out of the 17 candidates who scored above 400 marks in her school, four (including Sera) were yet to join secondary school due to poverty. 

She said many other candidates who scored above 350 marks were still at home as their parents had not been able to take them to their respective schools because of lack of school fees.

Sera’s former classmates, Mary Kulola Gilbert and Esther Wanyinya, who scored 363 and 369 marks, respectively, have also failed to join Mwasere Girls Secondary School in Taita Taveta county as their parents are unable to afford the fees.

Mary wants to be a medical doctor while Wavinya wants to be a surgeon. 

The twin sisters from Kanagoni area within Adu ward are appealing to well-wishers to assist them report to school.

Those willing to help the students may contact the head teacher through her mobile number 0723865789.

Johnson Nzai, a personal assistant to Magarini MP Harrison Garama Kombe, said the MP was aware of the cases and that all those who got more than 400 marks would have their fees paid through the National Government Constituency Development Fund.

Meanwhile, the lack of school fees is threatening the escalation of the menace of early marriages and teenage pregnancies that is already rampant in Kilifi.

Human Rights activist Justin Kitonyo says hundreds of students in the county have not been able to join Form 1 due to lack of money for fees, noting that this could open up avenues for child abuse and teenage pregnancies in the area.

He urges the government, local leaders, corporates and NGOs to scout for such students and ensure they join school.

 

-Edited by SKanyara

WATCH: The latest videos from the Star