Kathanga Primary: A Cry for Help in Kindiki’s Backyard as Pupils Learn on Bare Floors



Kathanga Primary: A Cry for Help in Kindiki’s Backyard as Pupils Learn on Bare Floors

In the heart of Tharaka Nithi County, the home of Deputy President Kithure Kindiki, sits a forgotten institution—Kathanga Primary School—where hope is slowly being choked by poverty, neglect, and government silence.

While national leaders issue grand promises of educational reform and digital literacy, the reality on the ground in places like Kathanga paints a heartbreaking contradiction.

A School in Ruins



Kathanga Primary doesn’t need a website. It doesn’t need a smartboard. What it needs are basic human rights:

  • Pupils learn sitting on dusty floors, some under trees when classrooms flood.
  • The school’s walls are cracked, paint long peeled, and roofs leak during every rainy season.
  • There is no functional toilet for boys and a barely standing one for girls.
  • Children share tattered books, some holding their pages together with twigs and rubber bands.
  • The teachers operate without offices, and some carry their own chalk and teaching materials.

The Shocking Irony

What makes the situation more painful is this:

Deputy President Kindiki hails from this very county.

He has walked these villages. He knows the terrain. He speaks of security, integrity, and service — yet Kathanga Primary School suffers in plain sight.

It begs the question: How can the second most powerful man in Kenya allow this to happen in his own backyard?

Forgotten Children of the Vote

During election season, politicians flood rural schools with promises:

  • “Every child will have a desk.”
  • “We’ll build new classrooms.”
  • “We’ll end learning under trees.”

But in Kathanga, all that remains are empty words and broken dreams.

The children here are not asking for laptops. They’re not asking for tablets. They are pleading for desks, chalk, clean water, and the dignity of learning in a classroom that doesn’t look like an abandoned cowshed.

Where Is the Leadership?

If this is the state of education in the Deputy President’s own county, what hope is there for the rest of the forgotten villages in Kenya?

It’s no longer just a question of budget — it’s a question of willpower, shame, and responsibility. No child in Kenya should be left behind, especially not under the watch of leaders who claim to serve all.


Conclusion

Kathanga Primary School is not just a school — it is a mirror of the government’s failed priorities, of how prestige projects take center stage while the basics rot away. If DP Kindiki won’t act for his own people, then who will?


#KathangaPrimary #ShameOnYouKindiki #EducationCrisisKE #NeglectedSchoolsKE #RuralEducationFail #TharakaNithiForgotten #NoDeskNoFuture #ChildrenDeserveBetter #KenyaEducationShame #WhereAreTheLeaders

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