Valentine’s Eve Horror: Woman Burns Boyfriend, Escapes with Ksh.318,000
What was meant to be a season of roses and reassurance turned into a medical emergency for 23-year-old Steve Godia, a third-year student at Multimedia University of Kenya.
On the eve of Valentine’s Day, at his rented house in Umoja 1 Estate, Nairobi, Steve says he was attacked by his girlfriend following a disagreement over his alleged communication with an ex-girlfriend. According to his account, what began as a tense conversation escalated into violence. He alleges that during the night, she boiled water and poured it onto his face, leaving him with severe burn injuries.
By morning, he says his eyes were swollen shut, his face severely burned, and the pain overwhelming. He was rushed to hospital, where he remains under treatment.
The matter was reported to police and is under investigation as attempted murder and grievous assault. The suspect is said to be at large.
Beyond the physical injuries, Steve claims the incident carried financial consequences. He alleges that two of his mobile phones were taken and that more than Ksh. 300,000 was transferred from his bank account, leaving him nearly penniless. The attack has also disrupted his academic calendar, forcing him to miss exams.
A Difficult but Necessary Conversation for Parents
While investigations continue, this incident raises urgent questions for families raising teenagers and young adults:
-
How do we teach our children to handle conflict without resorting to violence?
-
Are we equipping them with emotional regulation skills?
-
Do our sons know that they, too, can be victims of intimate partner violence?
-
Do our daughters understand that jealousy and control are not expressions of love?
Intimate partner violence is often framed through a narrow lens. However, abuse can occur in any relationship — regardless of gender. As parents, we must broaden the conversation.
Lessons Families Must Not Ignore
1. Jealousy is not love.
Extreme suspicion, monitoring, or aggressive confrontation are red flags. Healthy relationships are built on trust and communication, not fear.
2. Emotional regulation is a life skill.
Young adults need tools to manage anger, rejection, and insecurity. Without them, unresolved emotions can spiral into dangerous behavior.
3. Financial boundaries matter.
Sharing passwords, bank details, or unrestricted phone access in the name of “proving love” can expose young people to exploitation.
4. Sons need safeguarding too.
Many young men are conditioned to “be strong” and remain silent about abuse. Families must create safe spaces where boys and men can speak openly about harm.
5. Warning signs should not be dismissed.
Intense possessiveness, threats, isolation from friends and family, or dramatic emotional swings are indicators that a relationship may not be safe.
Raising Emotionally Safe Adults
As parents, our responsibility goes beyond academic success. We must intentionally raise emotionally intelligent young adults who understand:
-
Conflict resolution
-
Personal boundaries
-
Respectful communication
-
Accountability
Conversations about healthy love should begin early and continue into university years. Romantic relationships are often where young people first confront complex emotions — rejection, insecurity, betrayal, attachment. Without guidance, those emotions can become volatile.
A Sobering Reminder
For Steve and his family, this Valentine’s Day will forever carry a different meaning — not of flowers and chocolates, but of recovery and resilience.
As investigations continue, one thing remains clear: love should never leave scars.
For parents, the lesson is urgent and practical. Teach your children that real love is calm. It is safe. It does not harm.
Because when love turns violent, the whole family feels the burn.
For more, click HERE to join our WhatsApp channel!