The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime reported 725 cases of femicide in Kenya in 2024, translating to 2.66 deaths per 100,000 women.
About 75 per cent of these killings were committed by someone known to the victims.
For sex workers, the violence is compounded by laws that make reporting dangerous.
"Reporting violence can mean jail or even death," Rosemary Kasiba, executive director of SWOP Ambassadors, said at a press conference in Kayole.
"Survivors fear arrest and retaliation. Evidence is lost, police look the other way, and abusers act with confidence, knowing the system is very unlikely to protect those that they harm," she noted.
SWOP Ambassadors said its data shows patterns of systematic failure in police handling of violence cases.
"Police files are routinely sabotaged or disappear," Kasiba said, adding, "Bribery determines whose case moves and whose does not. Courts are underfunded. Powerful abusers are shielded by police and political allies."
The organisation called for increased oversight of police handling of violence, proper funding for health and courts, more investigative journalism and courage to confront abusers in positions of power.
When survivors are accompanied by paralegals, when hospitals provide care without judgment, when lawyers are present and when witnesses are protected, cases move, the organisation noted.
"When we call for decriminalization, we are simply calling for the right to report violence without fear of arrest," Were explained. "These laws do not prevent violence. In fact, they enable it by making survivors disposable while protecting their abusers."
SWOP Ambassadors urged media to report with care and responsibility, using plain-language definitions of decriminalisation and avoiding framing sex work itself as violence.
"If you wish to interview survivors, work with SWOP Ambassadors and other sex worker-led organisations so safety and informed consent are guaranteed," Kasiba said.
The organisation pledged to continue accompanying survivors to hospitals, police stations and courts, documenting violence and pushing for change.
"We are asking for nothing more and nothing less than equal protection under the law," Kasiba said, noting, "Criminalisation has failed us. It punishes survivors and protects abusers."