The search for 20-year-old University of Nairobi student, Jane Atila, has ended in heartbreak. Jane, a bright and ambitious second-year Bachelor of Education student, disappeared on October 3rd after visiting her boyfriend in Kikuyu. For weeks, her family clung to hope, praying she would walk back home alive. Sadly, that hope has been replaced by grief.
According to police reports, Jane was last seen entering the home of her boyfriend, Nicholas Mutua, who is not a university student. Neighbours reported hearing arguments between the two shortly before she vanished. When investigators later searched the house, they found no signs that anyone lived there permanently …. no clothes, no personal belongings. It appeared more like a trap than a home.
Days after her disappearance, the family began receiving anonymous calls. The callers claimed to have Jane and demanded money for her release. But no proof of life was ever given. Her mother kept her phone by her side day and night, hoping it might ring and Jane’s voice would be on the other end. It never did.
On October 17th, police retrieved a badly mutilated body from KEFRI Forest in Kikuyu and transported it to City Mortuary. For days, no one knew it could be Jane. The body was found in a horrifying state …. badly decomposed, with very little flesh remaining. The head had been separated from the body, and the skull bore signs of immense violence.
The family was called to view the remains. But what they saw was beyond recognition. Jane’s mother collapsed in tears, unable to confirm if it was her daughter. Because of the condition of the body, the family cannot identify her without a DNA test, which is now underway. Until those results come back, her parents remain in painful uncertainty — caught between hope and the unbearable possibility of loss.
Jane’s parents describe her as a hardworking girl who dreamed of becoming a teacher. She often said she wanted to change her family’s life and educate children in rural areas. Now, her books lie untouched on her desk, her clothes still folded neatly in her drawer, and her bed remains the way she left it. Every evening, her father sits outside their home, staring at the gate, silently praying she will return. Her siblings keep asking, “When is Jane coming back from school?” No one has the strength to answer.
Jane’s story is not just a family tragedy. It has shaken the entire nation. It is a painful reminder of the dangers young women face, even from people they trust. Parents are being urged to check on their children in universities and colleges because while we assume they are safe in lecture halls, some are struggling, some are suffering, and others are silently disappearing.
As the country waits for DNA results, one truth remains: a family’s life has been shattered, and a young woman’s dreams may have been silenced too soon.
May justice be served for Jane.






