THE STANDARD
EASTERN
As of Wednesday, May 12, the pupils still couldn’t access their classrooms. [Muriithi Mugo, Standard]
Pupils of Ndunguni Primary School in Mbeere South, Embu County reported for Term Three studies on Monday, May 10, but couldn’t immediately access their classrooms.
The learners’ classrooms had been occupied by internally displaced persons.
Nearly 3,000 families were displaced from Makima by the Tana and Athi River Development Authority (TARDA), which in late April claimed ownership of land inhabited by the families. Evictions were, consequently, embarked on.
The affected persons were subsequently accommodated at different public facilities, including Ndunguni Primary School.
However, it meant the IDPs, who had sought refuge at the school, had to be relocated when schools reopened on May 10.
THE STANDARD
EASTERN
A displaced woman ponders her next move at Ndunguni Primary School in Mbeere South, Embu County. [Muriithi Mugo, Standard]
For more than five decades, a group of elders have known Ndunguni village in Makima, Mbeere South in Embu County as their only home.
Never did they anticipate that one day they would be homeless.
But a week ago, the elders together with hundreds of residents found themselves at Ndunguni Primary School as Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) after their homes were demolished.
The demolitions by Tana and Athi River Development Authority (Tarda) has created a humanitarian crisis. Several organisations are in the process of doing rapid assessment to ascertain the needs at the school that has been converted to an IDP camp.