A 16 year old girl vanished from one of the most guarded girls schools in Kenya and the people running that institution are behaving like we are disturbing their peace by asking questions.
Read that again slowly.
A WHOLE CHILD disappeared.
Not outside a nightclub.
Not in a forest.
Not during chaos.
Inside a boarding school.
Inside St. Francis Mangu Girls in Kiambu County.
And what is shocking is not just the disappearance of Grace Wangare Thini.
It is the coldness.
The silence.
The arrogance.
The complete absence of urgency from people entrusted with children.
Grace disappeared on 10th April 2025.
The school only realised she was missing the following day after a teacher attending the third lesson noticed she was absent from class.
Meaning for hours nobody knew where she was.
Nobody checked.
Nobody panicked.
Nobody cared enough to immediately raise alarm.
This is a Form Four student living under school control, not an adult renting her own apartment in Nairobi.
So how does a child disappear from a highly secured boarding school without answers?
Today together with Maina Magret and Amos Koech we went to that school seeking one thing only:
Truth.
But what we found was walls.
The principal refused to face us.
The secretary redirected us like we were beggars asking for favours instead of citizens demanding accountability for a missing child.
Then came the deputy principal Mrs Gitonga in charge of curriculum.
The attitude alone told a story.
Arrogant.
Dismissive.
Defensive.
The kind of behaviour public officials display when they know something is wrong but believe ordinary Kenyans are too powerless to push further.
Simple questions became a problem.
Who last saw Grace?
Which teacher was on duty?
Which gate did she pass?
Was CCTV reviewed?
Were students questioned immediately?
Did she leave alone?
Was she assisted?
Why the delay in informing the parents?
No straight answers.
Only referrals.
Excuses.
Bureaucratic games.
They referred us to the Sub County Education Director over 40 kilometres away as if this is a paperwork issue and not a missing child crisis.
Meanwhile Grace’s parents are dying slowly.
Her father Mr Thini is battling hypertension from stress and emotional torture.
Her mother Eunice Wairimu is surviving on tears, prayers and hope.
Every day they travel from Naivasha near Wanyua Junction searching for answers no parent should ever beg for.
Imagine waking up every morning not knowing whether your daughter is alive, injured, kidnapped or dead.
Then imagine the institution responsible for her safety treating you like an inconvenience.
That is the cruelty this family is facing.
And Kenyans must stop normalising this madness.
A school cannot lose a child then hide behind offices and titles.
This country has become dangerously comfortable with institutional silence.
When poor families cry, powerful offices close ranks.
When children disappear, systems protect reputations first before human life.
That is why this case must not die.
The DCI, Ministry of Education, Child Protection agencies and every security organ in Kenya must move with speed and seriousness.
Because Grace Wangare Thini is not just another name.
She is somebody’s daughter.
And tonight somewhere in Kenya, two parents are staring at a silent phone praying it rings with news that their child is still alive.
A Form 3 student from Kagumo Girls has been reported missing after failing to return to school.
Benta Njeri, a resident of Kibirigwi, was last seen at Karatina Main Stage where she boarded a matatu heading to Kagumo. However, she never arrived at school. Also Harriet same class
Her mother, Agnes Muendo, is appealing to the public for any information that may help trace her whereabouts.
Please share widely to help bring her home safely.
Please call 0723135856 or report to the nearest police station if you have any information.
Someone please connect us with this lady. Why would the makanga run away with the lady’s 1,000 big change? Vyenye hii uchumi ni mbaya then unatoroka na change ya 1K?
Then dere anamwambia aje afanye chenye anataka? That is stealing by both the makanga and dere.
We must stop this matatu madness. If anyone knows this lady please help us get in touch so that we help her take action.
I’m currently being admitted for emergency surgery and urgently need help raising KSh 60,000 for the hospital bill.
If you’re able to support with any amount, please send to 0701353202. Diana Nzioki
Please help by donating or retweeting 🙏
help us retweet we find maureen...
🚨 MISSING 🚨 : A family in Githunguri is going through unimaginable distress after their daughter Maureen Nyambura Gathungu mysteriously disappeared.
Maureen, fondly known as Mo, left home on Friday to make routine deliveries but never returned. Since then, her phone has been switched off and she is completely unreachable.
What makes it more heartbreaking is that Maureen is a young mother to a 6-month-old baby, who is now left without her mum. Her sudden disappearance has left the entire family devastated and desperately searching for answers.
For days, relatives and friends have been combing through every possible lead, hoping for any information that could help trace her whereabouts — but so far, nothing has come up.
The family is now appealing to the public to help find Mo. Someone, somewhere may have seen Maureen or may have information that could help bring her home safely.
📞 If you have any information that could assist in locating her, please contact: Mary Gathungu (Mother)
☎️ +254 710 832174
You may also report to the nearest police station.
🙏 Please SHARE widely. A family is waiting, a baby needs their mother, and every second counts.
"She saved a stranger’s child with $15. Decades later, she discovered why he had been searching for her.
In 1982, a Kenyan boy named Chris Mburu stood on the brink of losing everything. He was the brightest student in his rural district, studying by lamplight inside an earthen house without electricity. But his family could not afford his school fees. Without help, his education would end — along with any chance of escaping a life spent picking coffee in the fields.
Meanwhile, across the world in Sweden, an 80-year-old kindergarten teacher named Hilde Back came across a notice for a child sponsorship program. She chose a name from a list: Chris Mburu, Kenya. She began sending $15 every school term. There was no recognition, no expectation of gratitude — just a quiet decision to help a child she believed she would never meet.
That small amount changed everything.
Chris stayed in school. Over time, he and Hilde exchanged letters. She asked about his teachers, his studies, and his dreams. Through her words, he realized she wasn’t just part of an organization. She was a real person who believed in him. And he never forgot her.
Chris eventually graduated at the top of his law class at the University of Nairobi. He later earned a Fulbright scholarship to Harvard. He went on to become a United Nations human rights lawyer, helping prosecute genocide and crimes against humanity around the world.
Yet one thing always weighed on his heart. He had never properly thanked the woman who made his journey possible. In truth, he barely knew who she was.
In 2001, Chris founded a scholarship program for children like himself — talented students from poor families whose potential might otherwise be lost. He asked the Swedish Ambassador in Kenya to help him locate his mysterious sponsor so he could name the foundation after her.
They found her. Hilde Back. Still alive. Still living quietly in Sweden.
Chris traveled to meet her for the first time. He expected to meet a wealthy philanthropist. Instead, he found a humble, warm woman living simply — genuinely surprised that anyone considered her actions remarkable.
Then filmmaker Jennifer Arnold began documenting their reunion. During her research, she uncovered something Hilde had never told Chris.
Hilde Back had not been born in Sweden. She was born in Nazi Germany in 1922 to a Jewish family. At sixteen, when Hitler’s Nuremberg Laws banned Jewish children from attending school, strangers helped smuggle her to Sweden. Her parents stayed behind because Sweden’s refugee policies did not allow older Jews to enter. Both were later sent to concentration camps. Her father died there. Her mother disappeared, never to be heard from again.
Hilde survived the Holocaust because strangers helped her escape. She lost her own education because of who she was.
Fifty years later, she quietly paid for the education of a child across the world — a child who would grow up to fight the same hatred that destroyed her family.
When Chris learned her story, he wept. Hilde, meanwhile, had no idea that the boy she sponsored had devoted his life to prosecuting genocide.
In 2003, Hilde traveled to Kenya for the inauguration of the Hilde Back Education Fund. The entire village welcomed her as an honorary elder. In 2012, she returned again to celebrate her 90th birthday, surrounded by hundreds of children whose futures had been transformed through her generosity.
Hilde Back passed away on January 13, 2021, at the age of 98.
Today, the Hilde Back Education Fund has supported nearly 1,000 Kenyan children in continuing their education. Many have graduated from universities around the world. Many now give back — mentoring younger students and contributing monthly donations to support the next generation.
One woman. Fifteen dollars. One child.
That child created a foundation. That foundation changed hundreds of lives. And those lives continue to change others.
This is Edwin Sifuna; a man whom even teargas seems to fear. When he roared at Amalemba Stadium in Kakamega, the police and their canisters of teargas scattered and ran for safety.
THIS IS ORGASIMIC!
THIS MAN MUST BE ARRESTED.
A helpless woman was robbed in broad daylight.
The suspect was clearly caught on camera.
This is not rumor. This is not politics. This is crime.
How many more people must be injured or killed before action is taken?
How many videos must circulate before the @NPSOfficial_KE & @DCI_Kenya move with urgency?
Ksh 5,000 REWARD for credible information leading to his arrest.
We are calling on the police to act immediately. The evidence is public. The face is visible.
If you recognize him, share with us we will protect your identity.
Silence protects criminals.
Visibility forces justice. Someone knows his father, mother, sister, friends, where he comes from etc
Presently, @VOCALAfrica_ is following up on a matter where two bodies of two male persons were found dumped today Saturday morning at a roadside on the Mombasa - Malindi highway at Mida, Kilifi county.
The two appear to have been tortured before being killed and dumped. One of the bodies has a bandage tied round the head.
The bodies have been taken to Malindi mortuary. @VOCALAfrica_ is working with locals and authorities to establish the identity of the two and confirm how they met their deaths for justice to be done.
I knew May Jerono during those UDA days. She was a staunch supporter of William Ruto.
Though hugely popular on social media, Jerono is not political, she mostly post Memes, sells merchandise, and shares typical kenyan videos on emerging topics/issues.
One of the videos Jerono shared ( Details remain scanty just like the case of Albert Ojwang) apparently was not well received by people in government.
Detectives were unleashed to hunt her down. The police officers tracked her mother who is a teacher, yanked her out of the staffroom in front of other teachers as she was wailing, pulled her through the school as students watched.
The mother was then tortured for hours, asked to provide information on the whereabouts of Jerono and asked why as someone from the President’s community, she would allow her daughter to share content that portrays Government in bad light.
After being tortured, Jerono’s mother was allowed to call Jerono who was told that if she does not come to the police station in Nakuru, whatever happens to her mother will be on her.
Jerono surrendered herself to the station in Nakuru, afraid that failure to do so would lead to the killing of her mother.
She was picked up by DCI officers who drove her to Kitale Central Police Station, 200km far away from her location of residence in Nakuru where the alleged crime of sharing anti-government material occurred.
She was never entered into the OB and the DCI officers who drove her there said they don’t know why they arrested her, except that orders came from above.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the reality of the Kenya we live in today where there is no rule of law or even an attempt of it.
Sharing consent deemed to be anti government is very dangerous. You will be arrested without due process, or even killed like Albert Ojwang without any reason given for your killing.
It is really difficult defending this government!
I hope Jerono will be produced in court and charged if she has committed a crime or released to go about her business.
The Ruto regime is taking kenya on a very dangerous path.
This monster—25yo Felicia Marie-Nicole Smith—kidnapped a 6-month-old baby boy with two accomplices, doused him in gasoline, set him on fire, and left him to die on Louisiana railroad tracks back in 2018. Baby Levi Cole Ellerbe suffered burns over 90% of his tiny body and died hours later.
Turns out it was at the request of the baby’s own mom! Both got plea deals Smith 80 years, mom 30 years. Cases like these should be 100% death penalty quick process, no years rotting on death row wasting taxpayer money. Justice for Levi! 🇺🇸 #UncensoredNews #TrueCrime #DeathPenaltyNow #LouisianaHorror
🚨 BREAKING: Newly released Epstein documents show Jeffrey Epstein and Bill Gates's science advisor Boris Nikolic privately discussed how to overcome African resistance to vaccination campaigns.
Their solution? "Candles and small mirrors, the same as the Americans did with their native Indians."
In a March 2013 email, Epstein tells Nikolic he consulted his "best sources" — people whose conclusions he says are "very often better than the list of the various 26 three-letter agencies."
The topic: Nigerian communities resisting a polio program "associated with both the west and with bill and melinda."
Epstein's source — described as "the most sophisticated, experienced and successful of the group, great experience in countries of your interest" — offered this advice:
"If he wants to get their consent, he needs to use candles and small mirrors, the same as the Americans did with their native Indians."
Nikolic's response?
"Great input — I guess we will need colorful beads and mirrors."
This is Bill Gates's senior science advisor — the man later named backup executor of Epstein's will — laughing along with a colonial metaphor about manufacturing consent from African populations.
Nigeria's distrust of Western vaccination wasn't irrational. In 1996, Pfizer tested an experimental drug on children during a meningitis outbreak in Kano. Eleven children died. The resulting Trovan scandal fueled decades of vaccine hesitancy across northern Nigeria.
But in this private exchange, African resistance isn't treated as a legitimate grievance rooted in lived experience.
It's treated as a problem to be outmaneuvered with trinkets.
Epstein also predicted that Boko Haram would begin kidnapping polio workers for ransom — a prediction that proved largely correct.
He wasn't guessing. He was receiving intelligence-grade analysis from sources he claimed outperformed the CIA.
And he was routing it directly to the man who controlled Bill Gates's scientific agenda.
Nikolic told Epstein: "I would rather seek your opinion than seek opinion of 1,000 of global health experts."
Think about that. The person advising the world's largest private health funder trusted a convicted sex offender's intelligence network more than the entire global health establishment.
Publicly, the Gates Foundation describes its work in Africa as "community-centered" and "evidence-based."
Privately, the people shaping that work compared winning African consent to trading beads with Native Americans.
That's not a communications problem.
That's a legitimacy problem.
📄 Source: EFTA01761706, released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act https://t.co/i2sTKOedWP
View my 5-part investigative series below: 🧵👇
My son hasn't spoken a word in two years. He's eleven now and the doctors say it's selective mutism triggered by trauma, but I know exactly when it started. Fifth grade, a group of boys cornered him after art class and told him his drawings were garbage, that he was weird, that nobody wanted to sit with him. He came home that day and just stopped talking. Like someone flipped a switch inside him and the light went out.
He used to be this chatty little kid who narrated everything he drew. "Mom look this is a dragon but a nice one, mom look this knight has your eyes." Now the house is so quiet I can hear the clock in the hallway from any room. His dad left when things got hard, said he couldn't handle the silence. So it's just me and Marcus and his pencils and this stack of paper I buy in bulk every two weeks because he goes through it like water.
Last week he slid this portrait across the kitchen table to me while I was paying bills. I looked down and my hands started shaking. This boy, this kid they said had no talent, drew a portrait so detailed I could practically feel the texture of the braids in the hair. The shading on the face, the eyes, everything was alive. He's eleven. He did this with a set of pencils and nothing else. I just held it and cried right there at the table and he came over and put his hand on my shoulder which is his way of saying it's okay mom.
I set up a little shop on the Tedooo app selling prints of his work because I wanted him to see that people out there value what he creates. No fees, just his art out in the world. The first order came in three days later and I showed him the notification on my phone. He didn't smile exactly, but he sat up straighter. Then a woman from Tennessee messaged through the Tedooo app asking if he could do a custom portrait of her late mother from a photo. I read it to him and he nodded yes before I even finished the sentence.
He still doesn't talk. I'm not going to wrap this up in some neat little bow and pretend art fixed everything. But my boy picks up his pencil every single morning now with purpose, not just escape. Those kids told him he was nothing. The world is slowly telling him otherwise and I will spend every day I have left making sure he hears it.
By marylynne gausma
New Jersey anti ice democrat mayor met a kid online and sexually assaulted them.
The 44-year-old allegedly made arrangements to meet up with the victim through social media and arrived at their house Monday while they were home alone.
LaBruno reportedly sprayed an 'unknown substance into his hand' and placed it over the victim's mouth causing dizziness, according to police.
He then allegedly sexually assaulted the victim after leaving them 'physically helpless' from the drugging.
Police responded to the 911 call and found the victim was suffering from 'cognitive impairment.'
The child was taken to the hospital to be evaluated.
12 Cousins all convicted of Raping the same child, over and over again, sometimes one after the other and always, anywhere they wanted.
These rapists all have two things in common, they’re all Cousins and they all go to the same Mosque. Let that sink in, they all go to the same Mosque and no one says anything !
Yasser Kabir, 25, of Belgrave Road, Keighley, was found guilty on three charges of rape.
Kabir's half-brother, Tauqeer (also known as Toki) Hussain, 23, of Belgrave Road, Keighley, was found guilty of three charges of rape - which included a second victim.
Sufyan (Sufy) Ziarab, 22, of Kendal Mellor Court, Keighley, was convicted of two counts of rape.
His brother, Bilal (Billy or Browny) Ziarab, 21, of Sedgwick Close, Manningham, Bradford, was also found guilty on two rape charges.
Israr Ali (Sari), 19, of Devonshire Street West, Keighley, was found guilty on one rape charge
Nazir Khan (Khany), 23, of Buxton Street, Keighley, was found guilty of rape.
Faisal Khan (Buller) 27, of Buxton Street, Lawkholme, Keighley, was convicted on one rape charge.
Hussain Sardar (Dolly) 19, of Bradford Street, Lawkholme, Keighley, was found guilty on one rape charge.
Saqib Younis (Saqi Butcher), 29, of Bradford Street, Lawkholme, Keighley, was found guilty of one rape charge.
Zain Ali (Droopy), 20, of Buxton Street, Keighley, was convicted on one rape charge.
Taxi driver Mohammed Akram, 63, of Holker Street, Keighley, was found guilty of sexual activity with a child under 16, when he was 59 and she was 14.
He had sex with her in his cab.
A 12th man, Khalid Mahmood, 34, care of Ashfield Prison, pleaded guilty to five charges of rape before the trial, we can now report.
- @peterstopcrime
🚨🇮🇷BREAKING: Iranian sources: the number of deaths in the brutal suppression by the regime in Iran has reached 86,677.
(i24News)
If confirmed, this toll would place Iranian repression among the DEADLIEST in contemporary HUMAN HISTORY outside the context of WAR.
🚨 Here is the full 42 minutes of my crew and I exposing Minnesota fraud, this might be my most important work yet. We uncovered over $110,000,000 in ONE day. Like it and share it around like wildfire! Its time to hold these corrupt politicians and fraudsters accountable
We ALL work way too hard and pay too much in taxes for this to be happening, the fraud must be stopped.