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Bombshell Investigation Reveals How Young African Women Are Lured To Dubai And Exploited

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Dubail victims

A new BBC investigation has uncovered a harrowing network that lures young African women to Dubai under the promise of legitimate jobs, only for many to be forced into sexual exploitation, abusive treatment, and, in at least two tragic cases, death under suspicious circumstances.

Dubail victims
Women who said they were trafficked by Christy Gold said she threatened to kill them and dump their bodies in the desert. Here Gold is seen in pictures posted on her Instagram account. Source: Via Instagram/Screenshot

The undercover documentary, led by BBC journalist Runako Celina, traces the recruitment pipeline from rural Uganda to the glitzy skyscrapers of Dubai, revealing a clandestine operation that preys on vulnerable women seeking a better life. Women recruited with promises of domestic or supermarket work often find themselves trapped in illegal prostitution and coerced into extreme acts for wealthy clients. Some were reportedly offered thousands of dollars to participate in one of the region’s most notorious fetishes, described online as the “Dubai porta potty” phenomenon—a degrading practice where men pay to defecate on women.

Families Left Without Answers

At the heart of the investigation are two young Ugandan women, Monica Karanji and Kayla Bungie, whose deaths sparked international concern. Both fell from high-rise buildings in Dubai, one year apart. Families say official explanations were inconsistent or incomplete.

Kayla’s brother recalls being told police believed she was on drugs, yet toxicology reports did not support that claim. Monica’s family discovered her burial in Dubai only after the fact, with her final resting place still unknown.

“There’s a feeling these cases are not properly investigated because they’re young Black African women,” Celina said.

Alleged Architects of the Network

Sex traffickers in the UAE trap African women in crushing debts and use traditional African spiritual beliefs to exercise control over them. Many women said they were forced to take a “juju oath” – a vow to do their recruiter’s bidding.

The investigation points to Charles Muesigwa, also known as Abby, as the man orchestrating the operation. Victims allege he controlled dozens of women at once, exploiting them for high-paying clients.

Another figure, Umar Basher, reportedly recruited girls in Uganda, soliciting photos and promising lucrative opportunities. Social media posts from his accounts show stacks of passports and IDs, highlighting the scale of recruitment.

Witnesses describe apartments crowded with as many as 50 women, and clients paying extra for degrading acts. While Muesigwa denies the allegations, he was reportedly detained briefly by UAE authorities after the documentary aired. His current status remains unclear.

Undercover Evidence

BBC undercover recordings capture brokers openly offering women willing to “do everything” for clients, with starting prices around $1,000. On inquiry about the porta-potty fetish, a broker said:

“They’re open-minded. I’ll send you the craziest I have.”

Celina’s team even met a representative of the network in Dubai while posing as potential clients, documenting firsthand how women were commodified for sexual exploitation.

A Global Pattern

Celina explains that this is not an isolated Uganda–Dubai problem. Messages from women across Europe, the U.S., and Africa reveal similar recruitment schemes, targeting aspiring influencers and young women seeking opportunities abroad.

“This is happening everywhere,” Celina said. “The world needs to confront how vulnerable women are being exploited.”

Digital Shame and Misogynoir

The investigation also highlights the role of social media in victim-blaming. After a sex tape was falsely attributed to Monica, influencers and online commentators accused her of “selling herself” for luxury goods. Celina warns that this misogynoir both shames victims and obscures the truth—they were likely trafficked, not willing participants.

Families Still Seeking Justice

For Monica’s family, the fight continues. They want her remains returned home. Celina visited the cemetery officials cited as Monica’s burial site—dubbed “The Unknown”—but found no trace of her.

The broader question remains: How many more women are lost, exploited, or buried without answers, and how long will the world ignore it?

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Africa Watch

Ghana Launches Month-Long Cultural Festival in Ethiopia to Strengthen Pan-African Ties

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Addis Ababa, Ethiopia – The Ghana Embassy in Ethiopia and Permanent Mission to the African Union and UNECA has officially launched “Ghana Month,” a major cultural and diplomatic initiative aimed at deepening ties between Ghana and Ethiopia while showcasing Ghana’s rich heritage across Africa.

The celebration, running throughout May 2026 at Kuriftu Village in partnership with Kuriftu Resorts, will feature cultural performances, creative exhibitions, music, fashion, culinary experiences, and entrepreneurial showcases. It is expected to attract diplomats, business leaders, tourists, and the Ethiopian public.

Counsellor Ms Grace Maakinyi Mbiba, in her opening remarks, described the initiative as “an opportunity to showcase the diversity of Ghana’s heritage and the dynamism of its creative and entrepreneurial sectors.”

Ambassador Dr Robert Afriyie commended Kuriftu Resorts for the collaboration, calling it a true embodiment of Pan-Africanism. He noted that the event aligns with Ghana’s broader vision of using tourism, culture, music, fashion, and history to promote continental unity and economic cooperation.

The Ambassador highlighted the growing bilateral relationship between Ghana and Ethiopia and positioned the month-long celebration as a practical platform to leverage the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) through cultural exchange and people-to-people connections.

The initiative is expected to boost tourism, trade, and mutual understanding between the two nations.

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Africa Watch

Botswana Acquires Stake in Angola’s Lobito Refinery in Major Intra-African Energy Deal

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Botswana is set to take up to a 30% stake in Angola’s $6 billion Lobito refinery, marking a significant intra-African investment.

The move reflects a growing push by African nations to retain more value from their resources on the continent.

The Lobito refinery, with a capacity of 200,000 barrels per day, is expected to generate around $700 million annually for Botswana under current assumptions. Instead of building new infrastructure from scratch, Botswana is buying into an existing facility to secure reliable fuel supply for Southern Africa, including itself, Zambia, and Namibia.

This deal reflects a broader strategic shift across Africa. For decades, many African countries have exported raw materials only to import refined products at much higher costs.

Investments like Botswana’s stake in Lobito signal a move toward greater regional refining capacity and supply chain control.

While the Lobito refinery will primarily serve Southern Africa, analysts note it could eventually compete with Nigeria’s Dangote Refinery, which currently dominates West Africa and exports to international markets.

The development is being watched closely as a potential model for deeper intra-African industrial cooperation and reduced dependence on external fuel imports.

Angola has signed a contract with China National Chemical Engineering Co. on Friday to build the $6 billion plant in Lobito.

“The processing capacities of the Lobito refinery remain at 200,000 barrels per day and the estimated cost of the investment is around $6 billion,” Diamantino Azevedo, the minister of Minerals and Petroleum, said in Luanda after a meeting between President Joao Lourenço and the company’s Chairman Wen Gang.

Sonangol, the southwest African nation’s state oil and gas group, partnered with an “American company” to conduct studies that led to decreased investment costs and improved refinery quality, Azevedo said, without naming the firm.

In 2022, Sonangol said it was working with Houston-based KBR Inc. on “engineering works” for the facility.

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Africa Watch

Pan Africanist Otchere-Darko Rebukes UK Conservative Leader Kemi Badenoch Over Recent Comment on Slavery Reparations

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Accra, Ghana / London, UK – Executive Chairman of the African Prosperity Network, Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko, has publicly rebuked UK Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch for her “disappointing” remarks opposing reparations for the transatlantic slave trade.

The borderless Africa champion has urged Badenoch, who has strong Nigerian roots, to use her position and heritage to foster constructive dialogue rather than defensiveness.

Otchere-Darko’s strong comments follow Badenoch’s criticism of the UK’s decision to abstain from a United Nations General Assembly vote on Ghana’s resolution declaring the transatlantic slave trade and racialised chattel enslavement of Africans as “the gravest crime against humanity.”

The resolution passed on March 25, 2026, with 123 nations voting in favour, three against (the United States, Argentina, and Israel), and 52 abstaining — including the United Kingdom.

In a post on X (formerly Twitter) on March 26, Badenoch expressed displeasure at the UK’s abstention under the Labour government, writing:

“Russia, China and Iran vote with others to demand trillions in reparations from UK taxpayers…and the Labour government abstain! Britain led the fight to end slavery. Why didn’t Starmer’s representative vote against this? Ignorance…or cowardice? We shouldn’t be paying for a crime we helped eradicate and still fight today.”

Otchere-Darko responded the following day, expressing disappointment and providing historical context.

He acknowledged Britain’s role in the eventual abolition of slavery — driven in part by Tory evangelical William Wilberforce — but noted that the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833 was passed by a Whig government under Charles Grey, which compensated slave owners rather than the enslaved.

“Britain, which played a central role in the transatlantic slave trade, also saw the early campaign against it driven by Tory evangelicals like William Wilberforce in the early 1800s,” Otchere-Darko wrote. “But it took a Whig government… to pass the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833, ending slavery across most of the Empire while compensating slave owners, NOT THE ENSLAVED.”

He argued that Badenoch’s stance fails to acknowledge the enduring legal and moral arguments for reparatory justice and urged her to leverage her background as a woman of 100% Black West African parentage to help shape a more progressive and honest response.

“Kemi has an opportunity, given her heritage and position, to move this conversation forward: not by merely amplifying defensiveness, but by helping shape a modern response rooted in honesty and partnership,” he said. “It is in the interest of Britain to invest in Africa’s economic transformation efforts and even if in ways that support British economic interest.”

Otchere-Darko concluded by warning that such positions could make the Conservative Party less attractive to Britain’s growing Black middle class.

The UN resolution, championed by Ghana and supported by the African Union and CARICOM, calls for global acknowledgment of the slave trade’s scale and lasting impact, as well as concrete steps toward reparatory justice, including education, memorials, and dialogue on compensation and restitution.

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