November 7, 2025

Ministry of Education closes 10 ‘ghost’ secondary schools after audit (LIST)

Governor Susan Kihika was on Thursday evening forced to flee to safety after her event in Kihoto, Naivasha, was reportedly invaded and disrupted by suspected goons

Governor Susan Kihika was on Thursday evening forced to flee to safety after her event in Kihoto, Naivasha, was reportedly invaded and disrupted by suspected goons

Education Ministry closes 10 ‘ghost’ schools as audit finds 6,000 under-enrolled institutions.

Thousands of schools across Kenya are operating with dangerously low enrolment and others with no students at all, prompting the Ministry of Education to consider merging them and reassigning teachers to institutions where they are needed.

In its latest audit, the ministry found that over 6,000 schools have fewer than 100 learners, while 10 secondary schools have been shut down after investigations revealed zero enrolment, raising concerns over possible mismanagement of public funds.

The 10 secondary schools that have been closed include Kiria Secondary in Nyandarua, Dr Machage Moheto in Migori, Ragia Forest High in Kiambu, Mugwandi Mixed in Kirinyaga, Friends Bulovi in Kakamega, Loiwat High in Baringo, Ngamba Secondary in Murang’a, Sintakara Secondary in Narok, Maji Mazuri Mixed in Baringo and Fr Leo Staples Girls in West Pokot.

Education Cabinet Secretary Julius Ogamba noted that of the 6000, some 2,145 public primary schools had fewer than 45 learners each, while 3,979 junior secondary schools had 90 or fewer students.

He noted that even as the audit is ongoing, the discovery of 10 secondary schools with no learners highlights the potential loss of billions of shillings previously disbursed to ghost students.

“These schools had teachers but no learners. We are investigating whether monies were released to these schools in the past to determine if there was fraud. Evidence from this exercise will be submitted for criminal investigations if necessary,” he said.

Ogamba said thousands of other schools have yet to verify the actual number of learners, exposing more potential ghost students. The clean-up was prompted by earlier findings from the Office of the Auditor General, which had raised concerns that some schools receiving government funding either did not exist or could not prove the presence of enrolled learners.

The CS confirmed that the ministry has withheld capitation where enrolment data is questionable, with Sh1.2 billion yet to be distributed to schools with unverifiable figures.

In primary schools, 5,833,175 learners were reported across 23,889 schools. After verification, only 16,788 schools were cleared for full capitation.

NPS announces changes to the police constables recruitment

Please forgive my late husband, Raila if he ever wronged you, Ida pleads

AU Observer Mission exposes irregularities in Tanzania’s disputed election

US government clarifies opening 2027 Green Card Lottery application

A further 3,065 schools either failed to submit enrolment data or submitted unverifiable figures, and the ministry released only 50 per cent of their allocation, pending further verification.

In junior secondary schools, 2.43 million learners were initially reported, but verification showed 2.94 million learners in 20,630 schools were eligible for full funding. Capitation to 934 schools was withheld due to missing or erroneous data.

For secondary schools, the ministry had received Sh10.37 billion for 3.35 million learners in 9,550 schools. Verification cleared 3.2 million learners in 9,540 schools, disbursing Sh10.09 billion. The 10 schools without learners were closed.

Ogamba emphasised that the ministry is committed to improving accountability.

“We are keen to clean our data and ensure that all resources allocated to us are utilised for the right purpose and in an accountable manner. We aim to ensure that the resources we ask for and the decisions we make on the use of those resources are based on accurate and verifiable data and evidence,” he said.

During the third-term disbursement, Sh10 million was allocated to Free Day Secondary School, Sh5.1 billion to Free Day Junior School and Sh1.7 billion to Free Primary Education, totalling Sh16.5 billion, with Sh1 billion still undistributed pending verification.

“The Office of the Auditor General reported that some schools that had received capitation from the ministry were non-existent. Following this, we launched a comprehensive verification exercise to determine the actual number of schools and learners,” Ogamba said.

“Funds will only be released to schools whose enrolment has been verified to promote accountability and transparency.”

Two people killed as goons attack Boyd Were’s event in Kasipul

Ukrainian President Zelensky holds talks with Ruto (DETAILS)

Governor Orengo warns ODM against ‘being swallowed’ by Ruto’s UDA

Government addresses reports of increasing senior school boarding fees

Follow us

FaceBook

Telegram