30th October 2025

Experiencing technology-facilitated gender-based violence in Kenya: Lived experiences of women and girls

Across Kenya, women and girls are increasingly targeted through online stalking, tech-facilitated trafficking for sexual exploitation, image-based abuse, doxing, and non-consensual distribution of intimate images (NCDII). This report from Equality Now and partners, including Awareness Against Human Trafficking (HAART) Kenya, the Kenya ICT Action Network, Life Bloom Services International and Trace Kenya, draws on in-depth interviews with survivors and frontline service providers to explore how technology enables gender-based violence, what justice looks like for survivors, and what changes are urgently needed. It complements our broader advocacy on OSEA/TFGBV standards and is part of Equality Now’s global campaign to end online abuse through survivor-centred, legally grounded approaches.

What’s inside the report?

  • Survivor stories detailing online blackmail, non-consensual image sharing, tech-facilitated sex trafficking, and sexual violence spanning digital and physical spaces
  • Interviews with legal experts, activists, and service providers across Kenya
  • Analysis of legal gaps, platform inaction, and social stigma
  • Concrete recommendations for national and international action

Who’s it for?

  • Lawmakers and government ministries in Kenya: to inform TFGBV policy reform
  • Judges, law enforcement, and cybercrime units: to strengthen survivor-centred responses
  • UN agencies and global institutions: to align Kenyan responses with international standards
  • Civil society and digital rights organisations: to support survivor advocacy and movement building
  • Media and journalists: to report on TFGBV ethically and with context
  • Tech platforms and intermediaries: to encourage accountability and content removal mechanisms

Key takeaways and recommendations

Technology is increasingly used as a weapon to harass, exploit, and control women and girls in Kenya. Survivors experience shame, trauma, and public exposure that can lead to social isolation, economic loss, or withdrawal from public life altogether. While legal frameworks like the Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes Act exist, implementation is patchy, and survivors report delays, dismissiveness, and lack of support from police and the courts.

This report builds on our global series documenting the lived experiences of online gender-based violence to inform systemic reform. Importantly, survivors described justice not only as a legal resolution, but as regaining control over their narratives, restoring their dignity, and ensuring the content is removed. By strengthening laws and amplifying survivor voices, Kenya can become a regional leader in online rights protection.

This report calls for a coordinated, rights-based response that centres survivors at every stage.

Recommendations

  • Strengthen survivor-centred laws and enforcement: Ensure TFGBV is addressed explicitly in Kenyan law and consistently applied in practice.
  • Improve intermediary responsibility: Mandate timely and transparent responses from platforms when TFGBV is reported.
  • Embed trauma-informed approaches: Train cybercrime units, courts, and police in survivor-sensitive protocols.
  • Public education and stigma reduction: Tackle harmful narratives that shame or blame survivors.
  • Ensure timely digital evidence handling: Build the capacity of law enforcement to gather and protect electronic evidence.
  • Amplify survivors’ voices: Involve survivors in shaping policy and ensuring redress mechanisms meet their actual needs.
  • Invest in digital literacy and protection tools: Equip women and girls with knowledge to prevent and respond to TFGBV.
  • Strengthen legal awareness: Support paralegal programs and community legal education on cyber rights.
  • Foster collaboration between government, civil society, and tech: Establish multi-stakeholder mechanisms for prevention and accountability.

Read the full report and join us in demanding stronger online protections for women and girls.

Explore more resources

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Not just online: Addressing sexual exploitation and abuse across digital and physical realities in Kenya

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Ending online sexual exploitation and abuse of women and girls: A call for international standards

This report uses a survivor-centric lens to examine online sexual exploitation and abuse (OSEA) laws in Europe within the global digital context.

Kenya judicial Bench Book on trafficking for sexual exploitation

The Kenya Judicial Bench Book on Trafficking for Sexual Exploitation equips justice actors with the tools to identify victims, uphold rights, and ensure accountability using trauma-informed, rights-based approaches.

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