
Originally published byPhilippine Daily Inquirer
When 17-year-old Ramsy Karani disappeared from his home in Kayole, a densely populated residential estate in Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, his family was thrust into a reality that an increasing number of Kenyan parents are confronting: the uncertainty and anguish of not knowing where a child has gone. Karani’s relatives joined hundreds of other families across Kenya whose children’s faces circulate daily on social media posters, WhatsApp groups and databases of missing persons. “This is the first time this has happened. Ramsy never leaves the house, he is always indoors. We are asking for his return,” said his mother, Doris Kamathi. […]...
Keep on reading: Kenya's missing children crisis exposes system gaps
Keep on reading: Kenya's missing children crisis exposes system gaps
๐ต๐ญ
More news from PhilippinesPhilippines
ASIA
Related News

Jollibee Group reinforces global quality practices to support growth
Just now
Blocked in Tampin, proclaimed in Melaka: Rais Yatim says Negeri Sembilan has a new Ruler
1d ago

How China imperial exam leaves historical footprint and impact on gaokao, modern education
21h ago

Do China-Russia trade payment frictions show limits of de-dollarisation?
18h ago

EU needs a โdedicated instrumentโ to unwind China dependencies, trade chief says
18h ago