They don't belong in society.
Archive: https://archive.today/7tgBx
From the post:
>Twilight was receding into night on July 13, 1991 when St. Kizito, a mixed boarding school in the Kenyan town of Meru, was plunged into darkness.
Outages and blackouts happened often at the establishment located roughly 50 kilometres from Mount Kenya, so for the staff and most of the students it appeared a day like any other.
But on this occasion, the power was cut deliberately.
Hundreds of girls, all aged between 14-18, slinked off back to their dormitories - a handful of single-storey brick buildings with tin roofs concealing simple metal bunk beds - as was customary when the lights went out.
A few hours later, 19 of them would be dead. Dozens more would be left with trauma that would haunt them forever.
They don't belong in society.
Archive: https://archive.today/7tgBx
From the post:
>>Twilight was receding into night on July 13, 1991 when St. Kizito, a mixed boarding school in the Kenyan town of Meru, was plunged into darkness.
Outages and blackouts happened often at the establishment located roughly 50 kilometres from Mount Kenya, so for the staff and most of the students it appeared a day like any other.
But on this occasion, the power was cut deliberately.
Hundreds of girls, all aged between 14-18, slinked off back to their dormitories - a handful of single-storey brick buildings with tin roofs concealing simple metal bunk beds - as was customary when the lights went out.
A few hours later, 19 of them would be dead. Dozens more would be left with trauma that would haunt them forever.
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