A rare school in Kenya is empowering teenage mothers with education and child care

KAJIADO, Kenya (AP) — Valerie Wairimu has no time to rest during break time at Kenya's Greenland Girls School. The teenager grabs a snack and goes straight to what makes this school unique: its nursery.

Associated Press Valarie Wairimu, 19, interacts with her son, Kayden Darmain during breaktime at Greenland Girls School in Kiserian, Kajiado, Kenya, March 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Kasuku) Caregivers interact with children at Greenland Girls School in Kajiado, Kenya, Thursday, March 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Kasuku) Everlyne Nasenya,16, left, and Valarie Wairimu, 19, both teen mothers are seen in a classroom at Greenland Girls School in Kajiado, Kenya, March 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Kasuku) Mary Wanjiku, 20 feeds her son Stephan Keyllin during lunchtime at Greenland Girls School in Kiserian, Kajiado, Kenya, March 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Kasuku) Florida Cherotich teaches Swahili lesson at Greenland Girls School in Kiserian, Kajiado, Kenya, March 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Kasuku)

Kenya Teenage Mothers

The 19-year-old is met by a team of nannies who have been watching her baby, Kayden, before she feeds him between classes.

The school is the only educational institute inKenyadedicated to teenage mothers and cares for many of their children. For its 310 students and more than 80 children from infants to toddlers, Greenland represents a second chance at school that is free from stigma and, experts say, a model for how young mothers can be reintegrated into education.

"When I found that I was pregnant, I didn't have anywhere else to go," said Wairimu, who has placed near the top of her class in exams at Greenland and hopes to become a doctor.

The boarding school was founded in 2015 and has put hundreds of girls and young women through secondary education while supporting their children. Some have gone on to successful professional careers, including in government and medicine.

The school is run by the nonprofit group Shining Hope for Communities and many students attend through grants.

The majority of students come from surroundingKajiado County, south of Nairobi, where the school has a network of outreach officers who can refer expecting mothers.

The school also is connected to social services and known to teachers across Kenya, including in the far west where Wairimu is from. She was living in a family with a single father and younger brother and unable to afford to care for a newborn. Her grandmother was aware of the school and had Wairimu referred.

Many of the students are from difficult backgrounds and some became pregnant as a result of sexual assault, as well as forced marriages.

Paul Mukilya, the school's manager, said parents often are not supportive and the school's outreach officers are left to seek agreement with community elders for students to attend.

"Some of the challenges which the students encounter are the family and the community. Most of them have failed to accept them the way they are," Mukilya said. "When they come here, we take them through psychological counseling and mentorship."

Sex involving minors — those under 18 — is illegal in Kenya, but the law is structured so only males are charged with a crime. Underage pregnancies often end up in court and Greenland supports its students and liaises with local authorities, especially in cases of underage marriages.

Advertisement

While students are in class, the school's staff take over child care and provide mentorship for the young women.

"Some of the mothers view their children as a burden," said Caroline Mumbai, a caregiver at Greenland who has two children of her own. "So we also teach them how to mother."

Making education accessible for teenage mothers is a challenge in Kenya and a mounting task for a country with a fast-growing young population. More than 125,000 live births in 2024 were by adolescent mothers under 19, according to Kenyan national statistics.

The Population Council, a health and development think tank, found in 2015 that two-thirds of teenage mothers cited their pregnancy as their reason for dropping out of school. As recently as 2022, research group IDinsight found unintended pregnancy was, after a lack of money for school fees, the leading cause of girls not returning to education.

Responding to demand from Kenya's coastal regions, Greenland Girls School is opening a second campus in Kilifi County.

"Every girl who gets pregnant and drops out during their school time must be allowed reentry," said Dr. Githinji Gitahi, chief executive of development agency Amref Health Africa. "Special schools are important in supplementing the general scalable policy framework. We should focus on these schools that are helping to close the equity gap."

Greenland students say they also appreciate an environment free from stigma, which encourages learning.

"People used to judge me because I got pregnant," said Mary Wanjiku, 20, whose son is almost 18 months old. She now hopes to become a lawyer.

"The moment I came here, I was received with love," she said.

For more on Africa and development:https://apnews.com/hub/africa-pulse

The Associated Press receives financial support for global health and development coverage in Africa from the Gates Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find the AP'sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas atAP.org.

A rare school in Kenya is empowering teenage mothers with education and child care

KAJIADO, Kenya (AP) — Valerie Wairimu has no time to rest during break time at Kenya's Greenland Girls School. The te...
Hopes dim for swift end to Iran war after Trump speech, oil prices surge

By Steve Holland and Enas Alashray

Reuters President Donald Trump arrives from the Blue Room to speak about the Iran war from the Cross Hall of the White House on Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in Washington. Alex Brandon/Pool via REUTERS An employee of the foreign exchange trading company Gaitame.com watches a TV screen broadcasting U.S. President Donald Trump's speech about the Iran war next to monitors displaying the current Japanese Yen exchange rate against the U.S. dollar in a dealing room in Tokyo, Japan April 2, 2026. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon Smoke rises following a strike, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Tehran, Iran, April 1, 2026. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS Two girls play at the yard of the old courthouse of Sidon, where they found temporary shelter with around 400 internally displaced people, amid escalating hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah, as the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran continues, in Sidon, Lebanon, April 1, 2026. REUTERS/Manu Brabo A man carries a dog to a shelter as sirens sound after Iran launched missiles towards Israel, amid the U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran, in Tel Aviv, Israel, April 1, 2026. REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun A man stands on the impact site of an Israeli strike, amid escalating hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah, as the U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran continues, in Beirut, Lebanon, April 1, 2026. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis People stand near damaged buildings, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Tehran, Iran, in this still image obtained from a handout video released on April 1, 2026. Iranian Red Crescent Society/Handout via REUTERS

U.S. President Donald Trump delivers an address to the nation about the Iran war at the White House in Washington

WASHINGTON/CAIRO, April 2 (Reuters) - Hopes for a swift end to the Middle East war faded on Thursday after U.S. President Donald Trump vowed more aggressive strikes on Iran, disappointing investors hoping for clearer signals of a way out of the month-long conflict.

Stocks slid, oil prices surged and the dollar gained after Trump said military operations would be intensified in the next two to three weeks, ‌offering no concrete timeline for ending hostilities that have sparked global energy supply chaos and threatened to send the world economy into a tailspin.

"I can say tonight that we are on track to complete all of America's ‌military objectives shortly, very shortly," Trump said in a Wednesday evening prime-time speech.

"We're going to hit them extremely hard over the next two to three weeks. We're going to bring them back to the Stone Ages where they belong."

Trump also suggested the war could escalate if Iranian leaders did not give in ​to U.S. terms during negotiations, with strikes on Iran's energy and oil infrastructure possible.

Iran's armed forces responded with a warning for the United States and Israel of "more crushing, broader and more destructive" attacks in store.

Ebrahim Zolfaqari, a spokesperson of the Khatam al-Anbiya central headquarters, said the war would continue until the "permanent regret and surrender" of Tehran's enemies, according to a statement shared by Iranian media.

NO REASSURANCE ON ENERGY CRISIS

Benchmark Brent crude prices jumped about 6% to $107.69 per barrel, with little reassurance from Trump's address about how the critical Strait of Hormuz energy conduit would reopen. Prices had fallen earlier on Thursday after settling lower in the previous session.

Stocks took a hit, with U.S. index futures down 1.3% and European futures sinking over 2%. Almost all Asian bourses were in the red, with Japan's Nikkei down ‌2.4% and MSCI's index of other Asia-Pacific shares down more than 2%.

"If he (Trump) was ⁠trying to inspire confidence in the markets, he has not done that," said Russel Chesler, Head of Investments and Capital Markets at Vaneck Australia. "The key question in all investors' minds is 'When is this going to be over?'"

There was no let up in hostilities, with the Israeli military saying it had identified missiles launched from Iran toward Israeli territory. Saudi Arabia's defence ministry said it had intercepted ⁠four drones on Thursday and Abu Dhabi said its defence systems had intercepted a missile near an economic zone, with minor damage caused.

The U.S. embassy in Baghdad urged its citizens to leave Iraq, warning of attacks in the capital by Iran-allied militia in the next 24-48 hours.

Thousands of people have been killed across the Middle East since February 28, when the U.S. and Israel struck Iran, triggering Iranian attacks on Israel, U.S. bases and the Gulf states, while opening a new front in Lebanon.

Iran also all but closed the Strait of Hormuz, a vital ​waterway ​carrying about a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas, pushing up energy costs and weighing on Trump's sagging approval ratings months ahead ​of pivotal midterm congressional elections.

Trump in his speech mentioned what he called a short-term rise in ‌domestic gasoline prices but said the U.S. did not need the strait and he challenged allies who rely on oil in the region to work towards reopening it. He blamed the higher costs on Iran's "deranged terror attacks against commercial oil tankers".

Advertisement

The International Monetary Fund, World Bank and International Energy Agency on Wednesday warned the war was having "substantial, global and highly asymmetric" effects and said they would coordinate their response, including through potential financial support to those countries hit hardest.

PROSPECTS ELUSIVE FOR NEAR-TERM RESOLUTION

In an interview with Reuters earlier on Wednesday, Trump said U.S.-Israeli strikes had ensured Iran would not obtain nuclear weapons, adding that U.S. forces could return with "spot hits" if the threat resurfaces.

"They were right at the doorstep (of a nuclear weapon)," Trump said in his TV address, without providing evidence, touting what he said were "swift, decisive, overwhelming victories on the battlefield".

"We are systematically dismantling the regime's ability to threaten America or project power outside of their borders."

Prior to Trump's remarks, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said in a letter addressed to ‌the American people that his country harbours no enmity towards ordinary Americans.

Trump said discussions were ongoing with Iranian leaders he considered less radical than ​previous leaders. On social media earlier Wednesday, he said Iran had requested a ceasefire but that would not be considered until its Strait of Hormuz ​blockade ends. Iran denied making any such request.

A senior Iranian source told Reuters on Wednesday that Tehran is demanding ​a guaranteed ceasefire to halt its attacks and said no talks have taken place through intermediaries on a temporary truce.

Some analysts say if Trump were to end the war without a deal, Iran ‌could emerge more emboldened, with greater leverage.

'GO TO THE STRAIT AND JUST TAKE IT'

Two security sources ​from Pakistan, which is mediating in the conflict, told Reuters that ​Islamabad had proposed a temporary ceasefire but had not heard back from either side.

U.S. Vice President JD Vance communicated with Pakistani intermediaries about the Iran conflict as recently as Tuesday, according to a source briefed on the matter, making clear Trump was open to a ceasefire if certain demands were met.

Trump had suggested on Tuesday he could wind down the war soon without a deal and scaled up threats to withdraw from NATO, to which he told ​Reuters he planned to express his disgust for what he considers its lack of support.

European ‌states have sought to appear unruffled, and France's junior army minister Alice Rufo said operations by NATO in the Strait of Hormuz would be a breach of international law.

Trump did not explicitly mention NATO in his ​address but urged countries needing oil to buy it from the United States or to "build up some delayed courage".

"Go to the Strait and just take it," Trump said. "Iran has been essentially decimated. The hard part ​is done, so it should be easy."

(Reporting by Reuters Bureaux; Writing by Nathan Layne and Martin Petty; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

Hopes dim for swift end to Iran war after Trump speech, oil prices surge

By Steve Holland and Enas Alashray U.S. President Donald Trump delivers an address to the nation about th...
Expelled from camp, Palestinian refugees now face Iranian rockets

By Pesha Magid

Reuters

TULKARM, West Bank, April 2 (Reuters) - The sight and sound of Iranian rockets arcing overhead have become near-daily for the Palestinian Ghanem family, expelled by the Israeli military from a refugee camp and now living in a rickety shack with a thin metal roof offering little protection.

The family are among an estimated 32,000 ‌people who Israel's military forced last year from homes in three longstanding camps housing Palestinian refugees and their descendants in the occupied West Bank.

Their situation has become even more precarious ‌since the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran on February 28, exposing the West Bank to falling debris from Iranian missiles taken out by Israeli interceptors.

"The children were terrified by the sound of the rockets," said Madleen Ghanem, who has children aged ​three, eight, 11 and 14 living with her in a one-room shack, while her older children live elsewhere.

More than 270 pieces of missile debris have fallen on the West Bank since the start of the war, according to the Palestinian Civil Defence rescue service.

Unlike in Israel, where bomb shelters are widely available, the West Bank has virtually no shelters, giving the Ghanem family nowhere to hide.

While Iran has not been reported to deliberately target Palestinian territories, four Palestinian women were killed last month when an Iranian missile hit the West Bank town of Hebron.

"We don't have shelters, the space where we stay is the same space ‌we hide in. There are no shelters and no place to ⁠run to," said Madleen.

Israel's military did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

'THEY MADE US LEAVE'

In early 2025, during a brief truce in fighting with Hamas in Gaza, Israel's military began demolishing homes and destroying roadways in Tulkarm camp, the nearby Nur Shams camp, and the Jenin refugee camp in the northern ⁠West Bank.

Israel said its operations in the camps were necessary to demolish civilian infrastructure so that it could not be exploited by militants. Human Rights Watch called the expulsions war crimes and crimes against humanity, in a report on the displacements published last year.

Some leaders from Israel's ruling coalition have called repeatedly for Israel to annex the West Bank, an area around 100 km (60 miles) long that Palestinians see as the core of a ​future ​independent state, along with Gaza.

Israel cites historical and biblical ties to the West Bank, which it captured during ​a 1967 war.

Advertisement

'CAN'T EVEN PROVIDE BASIC FOOD'

The Ghanems had lived in a three-storey ‌house in the crowded Tulkarm camp, where the women of the family had spent decades growing trees, flowers and vines that hugged their verandas.

Areej Ghanem, Madleen's sister-in-law, says Israeli soldiers broke into their family's home without warning in the middle of the night last year.

"We didn't take clothes, nothing at all. They made us leave. Our father can't get up or down...He's an old man, he can't walk. We left, dragging him," Areej said.

The Israeli military did not respond to a request for comment on the Ghanems' case.

After their house was destroyed, like many others in the camp, Areej, her sister and her niece moved with their father, Mahmoud Ghanem, 89, to a small rented room in the nearby town of Tulkarm.

Areej is the only one in the family earning money, working as a maid. ‌The room they rented is small with no kitchen, so Areej washes dishes in the bathroom. With little money, ​they have not been able to afford meat for more than a year.

"Honestly I have no hope for the future. ​We can't even provide basic food," Areej said.

Meanwhile Madleen, her husband Ibrahim - Areej's brother - and ​their children, who had also lived in the family house, moved to a different part of Tulkarm, where they had bought a small plot in 2023, ‌just before the Gaza war broke out.

Ibrahim had been working as a construction ​worker, one of thousands of Palestinians permitted to cross ​into Israel for work. But after the Hamas-led attacks in 2023, which sparked the Gaza war, Israel pulled work permits from most Palestinians. Ibrahim has been unemployed since.

Ibrahim says he and his wife sometimes cannot afford gas and instead do their cooking over a fire outdoors.

Though they now live about an hour's walk apart, the family tries to gather each ​week to create a semblance of normality.

At a dusty, roadside playground on ‌a recent Friday, Areej and Madleen spread a picnic blanket over a faded patch of synthetic turf as their children played.

Madleen said she dreams of finishing the house ​they started building and hopes one day the family can reunite under one roof. Areej said the important thing is that they find a way to remain together.

"Either ​we die together or we live joyfully together," she said.

(Reporting by Pesha Magid; Editing by Alex Richardson)

Expelled from camp, Palestinian refugees now face Iranian rockets

By Pesha Magid TULKARM, West Bank, April 2 (Reuters) - The sight and sound of Iranian rockets arcing overhead ...
Sceptres beat Charge 2-1 in front of 16,150 fans in Calgary

CALGARY, Alberta (AP) — Claire Dalton broke a tie 57 seconds into the third period with her first PWHL goal and the Toronto Sceptres beat the Ottawa Charge 2-1 on Wednesday night in a Takeover Tour game that drew 16,150 fans to the Saddledome.

Associated Press Toronto Sceptres goalie Raygan Kirk, left, celebrates with teammates after defeating the Ottawa Charge in a PWHL hockey game in Calgary, Alberta, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (Larry MacDougal/The Canadian Press via AP) Toronto Sceptres' Emma Maltais, left, knocks down Ottawa Charge's Kathryn Reilly during second period PWHL Takeover Tour hockey action in Calgary, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (Larry MacDougal/The Canadian Press via AP) Toronto Sceptres' Renata Fast, right, is knocked down by Ottawa Charge's Fanuza Kadirova during first period PWHL Takeover Tour hockey game in Calgary, on Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (Larry MacDougal/The Canadian Press via AP) Toronto Sceptres' Renata Fast, right, is knocked down by Ottawa Charge's Fanuza Kadirova during first period PWHL Takeover Tour hockey game in Calgary, on Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (Larry MacDougal/The Canadian Press via AP)

PWHL Sceptres Charge Hockey

Dalton also assisted on Maggie Connors' first-period goal. Connors set up Dalton's goal, and captain Blayre Turnbull assisted on both goals to help Toronto move past Ottawa into fourth place.

Raygan Kirk made 28 saves, allowing only Fanuza Kadirova's tying goal late in the first period. Gwyneth Philips stopped 22 shots for Ottawa.

Advertisement

Up next

Sceptres: Host Ottawa on Saturday, April 11.

Charge: Host Montreal on Friday night.

AP women's hockey:https://apnews.com/hub/womens-hockey

Sceptres beat Charge 2-1 in front of 16,150 fans in Calgary

CALGARY, Alberta (AP) — Claire Dalton broke a tie 57 seconds into the third period with her first PWHL goal and the Toron...
Coroner says New Zealand rugby player who died by suspected suicide had brain abnormality CTE

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — A New Zealand professionalrugbyplayer who died by suspected suicide last year had advanced chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a brain abnormality linked to repeated concussions, according to a post-mortem examination.

Associated Press

The diagnosis was announced Thursday by Coroner Ian Telford, who is conducting a preliminary hearing into the death ofShane Christiewho died in August aged 39.

CTE is a disease which causes progressive damage to brain tissue and has been known to cause mood swings, impulsive behavior and depression, among other symptoms. It can only be diagnosed after death.

Christie was a former New Zealand Maori representative who believed he was suffering from CTE and campaigned for greater understanding of the condition after the death of his friend and fellow rugby professional Billy Guyton, also by suspected suicide.

The abnormality has also been linked to deaths in theNational Football Leagueand in othercontact sportssuch as hockey andsoccer.

Friends and family of Christie said he wanted his diagnosis made public to raise awareness of CTE for players suffering its symptoms.

Christie who played Super Rugby for the Crusaders and Highlanders retired from rugby in 2018, suffering the effects of repeated concussions.

Advertisement

The coroner said pathologist Dr. Clinton Turner had confirmed "the diagnosis of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), which he characterizes as 'high stage'." Turner works at the University of Auckland "brain bank" to which Guyton and Christie had donated their brains.

The coroner said the diagnosis was the pathologist's opinion and that the cause of Christie's death would be determined by the coronial process.

The chief executive of New Zealand Rugby, Steve Lancaster told New Zealand media his organization recognizes "an association between repeated head impacts and CTE and takes this issue seriously."

"New Zealand Rugby acknowledges the CTE pathology results for Shane Christie confirmed by The Neurological Foundation Human Brain Bank. We also acknowledge and respect the role of the coroner to determine the nature of any inquiry they may hold examining the cause and circumstances of Shane's passing," Lancaster said.

"We share the concerns about the potential long-term effects of repeated head knocks in rugby and support the need for ongoing research into this."

AP rugby:https://apnews.com/hub/rugby

Coroner says New Zealand rugby player who died by suspected suicide had brain abnormality CTE

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — A New Zealand professionalrugbyplayer who died by suspected suicide last year had advanced...

 

ALPHA MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com