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11 Kibera KCPE pupils get Sh3m scholarship
Some of the children of Kibera foundation scholarship beneficiaries who performed excellent in 2008 KCPE exams, from different primary schools in Kibera during an interview at the Pamoja radio station. FAITH NJUGUNA (Nairobi).
Posted Friday, January 2 2009 at 21:55
The New Year has come with a pleasant surprise for some of last year’s Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE) examination candidates.
Eleven of them at Nairobi’s Kibera slum, six of them girls, were on Friday given secondary education scholarships by non-profit organisation Children of Kibera Foundation (CoFK).
The organisation decided that because the pupils performed well in an environment fraught with little food and comfort as well as inadequate reading materials shows that there is a great potential that could go to waste due to poverty if not tapped.
The CoFK intends to spend an estimated Sh3.75 million on the high school studies for the bright, but poor, pupils.
“It is very sad that an additional 20 pupils may not have the opportunity to pursue their education, yet they scored over 400 (out of a possible 500) marks,” the foundation chairman, Mr Kenneth Okoth, told the Saturday Nation.
His prayer is that private companies will identify deserving cases in the slum and pay their fees, give them pocket money and do shopping for them.
“These bodies (firms) have to do something to change the face of this community and get the residents out of poverty,” he said.
The beneficiaries are mainly orphans or children from single parents. The CoFK is already sponsoring four secondary school students and will be paying all their four years’ fees.
The organisation is registered in the US and was founded by Mr Okoth, a former pupil of Kibera’s Olympic primary school. “People helped me to get where I am,” said Mr Okoth, a US-based university lecturer.
“They did not give me food; they paid my fees as they know education is important. So, I have also decided to help these children to succeed.”
Olympic’s best KCPE candidate, Philtricia Barasa Were, who scored 434 marks, is among the beneficiaries.
“I am so happy,” said the 14-year-old. “This will now make me realise my dream of becoming a doctor.”
Her father, a single parent who lost all his property in the post-election violence of early last year, said the scholarship was the only way his daughter would make it in life.
“I lost all my businesses — my chemist’s shop as well as dry-cleaning and juice-making machines during the chaos,” recalled Mr Philip Barasa. “All went up in flames.”
This forced him to cut his support for seven orphans he used to sponsor in rural schools. He was broke and was forced to share a room with a friend in Kibera’s Katwekera village.
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Submitted by barbaraPosted January 10, 2009 04:13 AM
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Submitted by wuodngare
First I would like to congratulate Kenneth Okoth for taking this initiative. And to thank those who made it possible through their donations for these promising young Kenyans from the Kibera slums to continue with their Education.This is the kind of leadership we want to encourage to help uplift the standard of living of Kenyans from poor background. I would appeal to Kenyans from diffent background to emulate Kenneth and help the poor boys and girls to get education. Richard Onyango Ngare. Kibera Nairobi
Posted January 03, 2009 07:54 PM




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This is great work!! So Inspirational