Government told to beef up security in the North Rift ahead of schools reopening

Parents have urged the government to beef up security at primary and secondary schools straddling the Baringo–Elgeyo‑Marakwet border before classes resume on Monday, 28 April.

Led by Sara Korir of Korkoron Primary and Florence Soti said a new wave of bandit raids over the past fortnight has revived memories of last year’s deadly attacks and left children too frightened to return.

“We have heard gunfire three nights in a row,” Korir told reporters. “Unless we see police tents on these playgrounds, our sons and daughters will stay home.”

“Teachers can’t teach when bullets are flying, give us security first, and then talk about learning.” added Soti.

The Kerio Valley belt enjoyed a brief lull after a large multi‑agency operation late last year, but livestock thefts and ambushes picked up again in early April. On 8 March 2025 Deputy Inspector‑General Eliud Lagat toured Elgeyo‑Marakwet and acknowledged that “fresh deployments” were needed to keep classrooms open.

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Last week bandits killed a head‑teacher in Baringo South and stole dozens of cattle, just days after five villagers were shot dead in neighboring Elgeyo‑Marakwet.

More than 50 schools across Baringo, Elgeyo‑Marakwet, Turkana and West Pokot were vandalised or deserted in 2024, forcing over 10,000 learners to sit national exams in displacement camps.

“We’re not asking for miracles,” Korir insisted. “The officers are already in the valley — just camp them at the gates.”

County Directors of Education in both counties assured that they have forwarded the parents’ demands to Rift Valley Regional Commissioner Abdi Hassan, who is expected to visit the region soon.

Elgeyo‑Marakwet Governor Wisley Rotich said his administration would provide fuel and food rations for NPR detachments, while Baringo Senator William Cheptumo urged Parliament to fast‑track the Insecurity Compensation Fund to rebuild torched classrooms.

With reopening day only four days away, parents like Florence Soti remain wary.

“Our children carry pencils, the bandits carry guns. We hope the State chooses pencils this term.”

To end the problem, the parents proposed among other issues, permanent police posts within a one‑kilometre radius of every affected school, Rapid‑response units and safe boarding centres for candidates in Grade 9 and Form 4 who face national exams in October.

By KIMUTAI LANGAT

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