12th January 2023

Enhancing policy sesponses to addressing Child Sexual Exploitation and Abuse in Kenya

Every year, over 400 million children around the world are exposed to child sexual exploitation and abuse (CSEA). Defined as any exploitative and abusive sexual activity involving a child, CSEA can lead to a lifetime of physical and emotional damage for survivors. In Kenya, where many cases of CSEA go unreported, and there is no single national database for recording cases, it is not possible to quantify the scale of the problem. However, evidence shows that CSEA is becoming increasingly common across the country.

Key recommendations

The prevalence of CSEA in Kenya has been exacerbated in recent years by the COVID-19 pandemic. Evidence from the Survivors of Sexual Violence in Kenya Network suggests that the pandemic changed patterns of sexual violence against children,2 with victims now aged 12 on average3, compared to 16 previously4. Forensic medical examiners at gender-based violence recovery centres also noted that survivors attending hospitals for sexual and gender-based violations during the COVID-19 pandemic were often below the age of 16.5

With CSEA increasingly being perpetrated online and with the use of digital technologies, Kenya’s role as a technology hub in East Africa has led to disproportionate growth in the prevalence of online

CSEA, including transnational organized crimes such as sex trafficking and the production and distribution of child sexual abuse material. In 2020, between 5 and 13 percent of internet-using children in Kenya (aged 12-17) reported experiencing CSEA online, while 7 percent of internet-using children were offered money or gifts in return for sexual images or videos of themselves, which were subsequently shared with others.

This brief aims to support civil society organizations to improve legal, policy and other responses to child sexual exploitation and abuse (CSEA) in Kenya.

It is an output of the Enhancing Policy Responses to Addressing Child Sexual Exploitation and Abuse in Kenya project, which Equality Now and TRACE Kenya implemented in 2022 as part of the Out of the Shadows Index global project.

Explore more resources

1

2

3

Medicalisation of female genital mutilation/cutting in South and South East Asia

Equality Now’s policy brief with partners highlights the rise of medicalised FGM/C in South and South East Asia and calls for urgent government and health sector action to end the practice.

Opposing the conflation of female genital mutilation and gender-affirming care in the US

This policy brief warns against conflating female genital mutilation with gender-affirming care in the U.S., highlighting the legal, medical, and human rights risks of misrepresentation and urging rights-based, accurate policymaking.

The long overdue regional law on female genital mutilation: A welcome initiative in East Africa

This policy brief analyses the draft EAC Elimination of FGM Bill, 2025 and provides key arguments and messages to support its adoption across all EAC Partner States.

Newsletter Sign-up

Make a donation

I want to donate