While his Westminster colleagues will be tucking into chocolate eggs during the Easter recess, Jeremy Hunt MP has been invited to travel to Kenya to open a new school for AIDS orphans. The school is being built by the Hotcourses Foundation, the charity set up two years ago by Jeremy with former Education Secretary of State Estelle Morris.The new school lies in Nyumbani Village, a new settlement in Kitui province that is being established to accommodate 1120 aids-affected orphans and their grandparents. Many of the children attending the school will be HIV positive, but because of the expertise of a local medical charity they will all be on proper anti-retroviral treatment courses.Mr Hunt said: “With one child dying every minute from AIDS, I have long wanted to do something practical to help orphans trying to rebuild their lives after the trauma of losing both their parents. Two years ago I took out Christmas cards to Kenyan AIDS orphans made by the children of Woolmer Hill School. Last August I visited a village where they wanted to build a school for children affected by AIDS. The school is now finished and I am delighted to have been invited back to officially open it. I just hope it will give the children who go to it a second chance.”The school has eight classrooms and will accommodate a maximum of 40 children per class.