27 schools built on riparian land in city face demolition
Education
By
Mike Kihaki
| May 31, 2024
About 27 schools in Nairobi are on the verge of being demolished because they were constructed on riparian land.
This comes following a recent government directive that structures sitting about 100 metres from the waterways ought to be demolished.
Out of the affected schools, eight are in Makadara and Mathare constituencies, four in Kasarani, and three in Kamukunji, while Westlands, Starehe, Ruaraka and Roysambu have one school each.
Most of the schools are Unified Alternative Providers of Basic Education and Training (APBET) institutions. APBET institutions provide essential education services in informal settlements where government schools are scarce.
According to Dr Paul Wanjohi, a National Executive Committee Member of APBET, the move if effected could leave many learners out of school noting that many students have already dropped out of school after they were displaced by floods.
READ MORE
Why construction sector is vibrant in semi-arid counties
Treasury CS spells out plans to lay ground for steady economic growth
How plan to free millions in container deposits will work
How CS Mbadi's proposed new tax measures will directly affect you
Global real estate investors find sweet spot in alluring Watamu
How housing initiative changes lives of widows in Rarieda
KRA surpasses monthly target as October revenue hits Sh210b
Love for fine suits turns pharmacist into fashion designer sensation
The struggles of doing business next to learning institutions
Developer defends use of Jevanjee Gardens' land as collateral for Sh1.9b loan
“Most students who attend these schools come from humble backgrounds and their households cannot afford fees in public or private institutions,” he stated.