Home Human Rights Western Men Accused of Sexually Exploiting Women and Children Across Africa While Leaders Hand Out Visas to Predators
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Western Men Accused of Sexually Exploiting Women and Children Across Africa While Leaders Hand Out Visas to Predators

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Across Africa, a troubling pattern has emerged. Western men with histories of alleged sexual violence are reportedly entering African countries where women and children become their alleged victims, while lax visa policies, and political indifference, allow them to roam freely.

In Ghana, social media erupted after reports that a Russian national was secretly recording himself approaching and flirting with women in public, allegedly intending to profit from sexually suggestive content, before leaving the country amid widespread anger that foreign men were treating Ghana as a playground rather than a sovereign nation.

In Kenya, authorities arrested Swiss national Gisler Emil Johann after a missing 15‑year‑old girl was found in his residence in a coastal tourist area. The girl’s disappearance had been reported by her parents, and neighbours raised alarms after noticing the minor with the expatriate. Police confirmed the arrest, saying the case shocked the community and underscored that foreign nationality “does not place anyone above the law.”

In Nigeria, where a string of disturbing entries by British media personality Tim Westwood has sparked public fury. According to local reporting, a man identified as a UK entertainer long accused of rape allegations resurfaced in Nigeria, reportedly rebranding himself as a chef while facing serious allegations, including being charged with multiple counts of rape during and after a widely publicised birthday event linked to the Lagos governor’s circle. These incidents highlight how convicted or accused foreign predators can gain entry without scrutiny, then exploit loopholes for personal gain and harmful behaviour.

READ ALSO: Lagos Governor Sanwo-Olu’s 60th Birthday DJ, Tim Westwood, Charged with Four Counts of Rape

Another report from West Africa Weekly detailed growing public anger after yet another convicted child rapist reportedly gained entry into Nigeria, prompting questions about oversight, border controls, and the criteria used to grant visas to individuals with violent criminal histories.

Together, these incidents have ignited a deeper conversation across African social media and civil society about who the continent is allowing into its communities, and whether visa and security policies are robust enough to protect citizens, especially women and children.
The weak enforcement, corruption, and a desire to attract foreign investment or tourism can unintentionally create environments where predators feel safe operating. The issue is not merely nationality, but the failure of institutions to enforce background checks, to act decisively when allegations arise, and to hold powerful or well‑connected visitors to the same standards as citizens.

Africans need to calls their governments to overhaul visa screening, require stronger checks on criminal histories, and ensure that anyone accused or convicted of sexual violence, regardless of nationality or status, faces swift justice and deportation if appropriate.

As investigations continue in Ghana, Kenya, and Nigeria, the debate has become emblematic of a larger struggle over safety, accountability, and the price Africa pays when borders are open without adequate safeguards. For many Africans, the outrages are not isolated incidents, they are symptoms of systemic weakness that leaves women and children vulnerable to predation under the guise of tourism and opportunity.

READ MORE: US Security Narrative Shifts from Terrorism to Mining in Nigeria

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