Kenyans on social media have erupted in anger and sorrow following a damning BBC Africa documentary exposing a child sex trafficking ring in Maai Mahiu, Nakuru County.
The investigation revealed how young girls, some as young as 13, are being exploited by ruthless traffickers, referred to as 'madams, who allegedly supply them to truck drivers in the busy transit town.
Outraged citizens have called on authorities to act swiftly, accusing the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) of inaction despite the BBC providing evidence.
On social media platform X, users expressed fury at the lack of arrests. One user slammed the DCI, writing: “Our DCI is only professional in tracking tweeps… But in serious crimes like organ trafficking and child sex trade, they draw a huge line.”
Another accused officials of complicity, stating, “If we had a working system, these women would be in prison for life.”
The BBC Africa Eye documentary, titled MADAMS: Exposing Kenya's Child Sex Trade, detailed how undercover reporters infiltrated the trafficking network, posing as sex workers to expose the syndicate. Investigators befriended traffickers, including a woman named Nyambura, who openly admitted to recruiting minors.
Nyambura, speaking in Kikuyu, chillingly described how easy it was to manipulate children into prostitution.
“They are still children, so you can trick them with sweets,” she said, adding that truckers were the primary customers. She admitted to employing a 13-year-old girl who had been working for six months.
"They’re still children, so it’s easy to manipulate them by just handing them sweets."#BBCAfricaEye investigates how women known as "madams" are exploiting children for sex in Kenya.
— BBC News Africa (@BBCAfrica) August 4, 2025
? Watch the documentary here: https://t.co/yHBuGBVWuz pic.twitter.com/oJWPSkVuUx
Another alleged trafficker, Cheptoo, revealed that the illegal trade operated in secrecy due to Kenya’s strict laws against child exploitation, which carry life imprisonment.
She took an undercover reporter to a house where two young girls admitted to servicing up to five men a day, often without protection.
“I have to do it. If I refuse, I’ll be chased away with nowhere to go,” one girl confessed.
Despite the exposé stating they had submitted evidence to Kenyan police in March, no arrests have been made.
Kenya is an extremely dangerous place for children. Kids are dying in fires in dormitories an no one is held accountable, assaulted/groomed in schools, being starved and harmed in cults and their education is defunded https://t.co/68jV9g8C7P
— United In Grief (@justinewanda) August 4, 2025
BBC reporter Njeri Mwangi stated, “The police claim the women and girls cannot be traced.”
As pressure mounts, Kenyans are urging the government to dismantle the trafficking network and protect vulnerable children. The documentary has not only exposed a hidden crisis but also reignited debates about corruption and systemic failures in tackling organized crime.