At first, the talk circulating around Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology did not seem like anything unusual. Students exchanged bits of information in lecture halls, hostel corridors, and casual gatherings, treating it as just another campus story that would eventually be forgotten. Like many rumours that briefly capture attention, most people expected it to fade away after a short while. Instead, it continued to attract more curiosity with each passing day. WATCH THE VIDEO.
As the conversations grew, so did the number of different versions being shared. Some students claimed to know additional details, while others repeated only fragments of what they had heard from friends. With every retelling, the original account became harder to identify, and distinguishing facts from assumptions proved increasingly difficult. Yet many remained confident that the information they possessed reflected what had truly taken place. WATCH THE VIDEO.
The discussion soon moved beyond the university environment and found a larger audience online. Social media users, many of whom had no direct connection to the incident, began offering their own interpretations and theories based on limited information. The more the story spread, the more it became shaped by speculation rather than evidence. In the end, no confirmed explanation emerged, leaving people questioning what was real, what had been misunderstood, and how quickly rumours can take on a life of their own. WATCH THE VIDEO.
Any advice for them?


