SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL! Horny Namiryango Boys on ‘Kandahar Mission’ Storm Girls’ Dorm for Late-night Sexcapades, Over 10 Arrested

Mukono has been rocked by a jaw-dropping school scandal after more than ten randy students from Namiryango High School, Gulama, were hauled to Mukono Police Station over explosive allegations of sneaking into the girls’ dormitory for late-night escapades.
The shocking incident, which has sent panic through parents and exposed deep cracks in school discipline, unfolded like a badly scripted movie — with boys reportedly slipping into the girls’ sacred sleeping quarters under the cover of darkness for what insiders are calling “Kandahar missions.”
School director and headteacher Betty Nassali did not mince words as she cracked the whip, ordering the immediate handover of the suspects to police in what she described as a final, no-nonsense response to a growing culture of indiscipline that had spiraled out of control.
“This was not the first time,” sources within the school revealed. “Warnings had been issued. Internal punishments tried. But the boys kept coming back.”
And this time, the hammer came down hard.
But the drama didn’t end there.
Several of the rounded-up students are now crying foul, insisting they were innocent victims caught in a sweeping crackdown. Speaking in hushed, shaken tones, some claimed they were dragged to police despite denying any involvement in the alleged dormitory invasion.
“I didn’t do anything,” one student reportedly protested. “But they didn’t listen.”
Yet Nassali stood her ground, painting a picture of a school under siege from repeated breaches of discipline. In a particularly disturbing twist, she revealed that one of the boys found inside the girls’ dormitory was not even supposed to be at the school.
The suspect is said to be a former student who had previously been expelled — but somehow sneaked back into the premises with help from current students, before allegedly being discovered in a compromising situation with a Senior Three girl.
That revelation has sparked outrage and fear in equal measure.
How does an expelled student walk back into school like nothing happened? How did he make it all the way into a girls’ dormitory?
Those questions are now haunting parents and authorities alike.
Despite the gravity of the allegations, the headteacher maintained that the students were “not formally arrested,” a statement that raised eyebrows after witnesses reported seeing the boys at Mukono Police Station looking distressed, barefoot, and visibly shaken — a scene that painted a far more intense picture than school officials were willing to admit.
Adding fuel to the fire, it also emerged that parents had not yet been informed at the time their children were whisked off to police, a move likely to ignite fury among guardians who expect to be the first line of intervention in such sensitive matters.
Behind the scandal lies a deeper, more troubling reality.
The repeated sneaking of boys into the girls’ dormitory points to a dangerous breakdown in supervision. Dormitories — especially for girls — are supposed to be tightly secured, controlled environments. But what has been exposed at Namiryango suggests something is terribly wrong.
Security gaps. Weak enforcement. A system that appears unable to deter even previously expelled students from returning and causing chaos.
Education observers warn that such incidents are not just about indiscipline — they open the door to far more serious risks, including exploitation, emotional trauma, and unsafe environments for learners.
The involvement of police has also divided opinion, with critics arguing that schools are increasingly resorting to law enforcement instead of strengthening internal discipline systems and engaging parents early.
But as the dust settles on this explosive scandal, one thing is clear — trust has been shaken.
Parents are now demanding answers. How safe are their children? Who is watching over them at night? And how did a school dormitory turn into a playground for midnight mischief?
With pressure mounting, Namiryango High School now faces a critical test — to clean up its act, tighten security, and restore confidence before the scandal spirals even further out of control.
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