The tragedy at Utumishi Girls Academy in Gilgil must not be treated as another passing headline in a country that has become dangerously good at mourning and dangerously poor at changing. Sixteen young lives were lost in a dormitory fire. Dozens of other students were injured. Families were thrown into grief. A school was shaken. A nation was forced, once again, to stare at the terrifying question we keep avoiding: what are we teaching our children before the law teaches them for us?
According to official and media reports, eight students were arrested as persons of interest after preliminary investigations linked them to a suspected arson attack. Investigators reportedly relied on witness interviews, forensic work and CCTV review as they reconstructed what happened. The full legal process must be allowed to run, and every child involved must be treated according to the law. But the moral lesson is already too serious to postpone.
This is no longer a small matter of school indiscipline. It is not a prank. It is not teenage stubbornness. It is not ordinary rebellion. When fire, violence, destruction or any act capable of harming other human beings enters the picture, the matter stops being a school problem and becomes a criminal matter. That is the line every child must understand before emotions, peer pressure, anger or foolish courage pushes them across it.
Parents must now speak to their children with brutal love. They must tell them that parental authority has limits. A mother can correct you. A father can warn you. A guardian can discipline you. A teacher can report you. But once you break the law, the matter moves beyond family negotiation. At that point, the state steps in, and the language changes from advice to investigation, from apology to evidence, from punishment at home to accountability before the justice system.
That is the truth many homes have avoided because it sounds harsh. But the truth is not harsh when it saves a child from destroying their life. The lie is what is dangerous. The lie is telling children that because they are young, nothing serious can happen to them. The lie is allowing them to believe that family influence, tears, status, money or excuses will always rescue them. The law does not become powerless because someone is somebody’s child.
The Utumishi tragedy must therefore become a national lesson in consequences. Children must be taught that anger does not suspend the law. Friendship does not suspend the law. Being in a crowd does not suspend the law. Being upset with school rules does not suspend the law. Whatever the grievance, no child has the right to turn a school into a danger zone for other children.
There is a bigger issue here: some children are growing up with emotion but without restraint, information but without wisdom, confidence but without conscience. They know how to argue, trend, insult, resist and defy, but many have not been taught the weight of one reckless decision. They do not understand that a single moment can follow them for the rest of their lives, not as gossip, but as a record, a case, a wound, a consequence.
This is why the conversation must begin at home. Before the police. Before the courts. Before the school board. Before the press conferences. A child must hear clearly that life is not a game where every mistake can be reset. Some decisions damage families. Some decisions bury dreams. Some decisions bring the state to your door. Some decisions make your parents spectators in a process they cannot control.
Schools also have a duty that cannot be escaped. Reports have raised serious concerns about emergency preparedness, possible overcrowding, locked exits and failures in supervision. If adults were warned and failed to act, then the law must also look at them. Accountability cannot stop at children if adults neglected their duty. A school is not just a place for exams; it is a place where parents entrust the lives of their children to other adults.
The state, too, must stop responding to school disasters with the same exhausted script: condolences, visits, investigations, promises, silence, and then another tragedy. Kenya has lived through school fires before. We have buried children before. We have demanded reforms before. Yet the pattern keeps returning because enforcement is weak, supervision is inconsistent, and safety audits are often treated like paperwork instead of life-saving obligations.
Every dormitory in Kenya should now be treated as a serious safety question. Are exits open? Are students overcrowded? Are teachers reachable at night? Are fire extinguishers functional? Are students trained on emergency response? Are reports of planned violence taken seriously? Are school administrators afraid of bad publicity, or are they committed to protecting children even when the truth is uncomfortable?
But even as we demand institutional accountability, we must not run away from personal responsibility. Children must know that they are not immune from consequences simply because they are children. Yes, they deserve protection. Yes, they deserve fair treatment. Yes, they deserve rehabilitation where the law allows it. But they must also understand that childhood is not a license to endanger other people’s lives.
Parents should stop laughing off cruelty as confidence. They should stop excusing bullying as childishness. They should stop defending every wrong their child does before asking what really happened. A parent who protects a child from correction may one day watch helplessly as the law corrects that child with a force the family cannot soften.
This is the painful warning: when a child is still at home, a parent can shape them. When the child is still listening, a parent can guide them. When the mistake is still small, a parent can intervene. But when harm has been done, when other families are grieving, when investigators are collecting evidence, the parent’s voice becomes smaller. Love remains, but control is gone.
The Utumishi Girls tragedy should break something in us, not only emotionally, but morally. It should break our casual attitude toward school safety. It should break our habit of ignoring warning signs. It should break our culture of defending wrongdoing because the accused is young, familiar, connected or sympathetic. Compassion is necessary, but compassion without truth is another form of negligence.
Children must be told that there are choices that can destroy more than the moment. A bad choice can destroy another child’s future. It can destroy a family’s peace. It can destroy a school community. It can destroy the child who made the choice. That is why discipline is not hatred. Boundaries are not oppression. Correction is not cruelty. Sometimes the most loving thing an adult can do is to warn a child before the law does.
Kenya must also ask why some students feel that destruction is a language. If there are grievances in schools, there must be safe channels for reporting them. If students are distressed, there must be counselling. If discipline is abusive, it must be addressed. If dormitories are unsafe, they must be fixed. But none of these realities can ever justify actions that place innocent children in danger.
The lesson from Utumishi is simple, painful and urgent: the home, the school and the state must stop working as separate islands. Parents must teach responsibility. Schools must enforce safety and listen to warning signs. The state must investigate firmly and fairly. Children must understand that rights come with responsibility, and freedom without discipline can become destruction.
A country that loves its children must protect them from danger, including the danger that comes from other children. It must protect the innocent, guide the troubled, punish negligence, and reform systems that keep failing. It must mourn honestly, investigate thoroughly, and act decisively. Anything less is betrayal dressed as sympathy.
To every child reading this, hear it clearly: your parents can love you, but they cannot always save you. They can stand beside you, but they cannot erase the law. They can pray for you, but they cannot undo every consequence. Before you follow a crowd, before you act in anger, before you touch what can harm others, remember this: parental authority ends where the state begins.
And to every parent, guardian, teacher and leader, the warning is equally clear. Do not wait until a tragedy has happened to start teaching the truth. Do not wait until the police arrive to begin parenting. Do not wait until a dormitory burns to ask whether children understood the consequences. Tell them now. Warn them now. Correct them now. Love them enough to be firm, because once the law takes over, your tears may not be enough.
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