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St. Kizito massacre

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St. Kizito was a coeducational boarding secondary school[1] in Kenya in Akithii Location, Meru County. It was named for Saint Kizito.

Mass rapes and murders

On 13 July 1991, over 70 girls were raped and 19 killed[1] at St. Kizito school. After supposedly declining to participate in a strike organized by the boys at the school, the girls' dormitory was invaded by male students and the chaos began. Initial and angering reports from the headteacher included comments that the boys had not intended to hurt the girls, but "only wanted to rape".

The school was closed[when?] after the event as international outrage erupted on the treatment of women in Kenya and other African nations.

The school was later renamed St. Cyprian Secondary School.[when?]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Staff (15 July 1991). "Boys at Kenya School Rape Girls, Killing 19" Archived June 17, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. Reuters (via The New York Times). Retrieved 21 May 2016.
  • Kariuki, Caroline, W. "Masculinity and Adolescent Male Violence: The Case of Three Secondary Schools in Kenya".[full citation needed]
  • Kenya: 14 Years Later, Boys at the heart of the St Kizito tragedy speak out[1]
  • There is also a school called St Kizito Secondary School in Francistown, Botswana Gerald Estate.For more information just check the school page in Facebook (ST KIZITO SECONDARY SCHOOL FRANCISTOWN BW )


  1. ^ Ngesa, Mildred (13 Jul 2005). "Kenya: 14 Years Later, Boys At the Heart of the St Kizito Tragedy Speak Out". Daily Nation. Retrieved 7 Mar 2018.[dead link] Alt URL