By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Starr FmStarr FmStarr Fm
  • Home
  • Election Hub
  • General
    GeneralShow More
    Health sciences scholar Professor Christian Agyare appointed as next KNUST VC
    May 13, 2026
    Government moves to promote responsible mining through MDF–GGSA partnership
    May 13, 2026
    Five arrested, including two ex-convicts, as police bust robbery syndicate in Kasoa and Swedru
    May 13, 2026
    Ekumfi Asaman: 40-year-old woman allegedly butchers husband to death over charcoal money dispute
    May 13, 2026
    Elmina: 36-year-old carpenter allegedly hangs himself in police custody after defiling his 11-year-old stepdaughter
    May 13, 2026
  • Business
    BusinessShow More
    Government moves to promote responsible mining through MDF–GGSA partnership
    May 13, 2026
    NPRA deploys risk-based supervision to fortify Ghana’s pension industry
    May 13, 2026
    Dr. Joseph Siaw Agyepong calls for homegrown solutions at Africa Forward Summit in Kenya
    May 12, 2026
    President Mahama arrives in Nairobi for Africa Forward Summit
    May 11, 2026
    GRA sets sights beyond GHC 170 billion target for 2026 fiscal year
    May 11, 2026
  • Politics
    PoliticsShow More
    Wontumi pledges disciplined, issue-based campaign following meetings with Bawumia and Akufo-Addo
    May 13, 2026
    Bawumia condems “assault” on NPP supporters, warns of “day of accountability
    May 13, 2026
    Government moves to promote responsible mining through MDF–GGSA partnership
    May 13, 2026
    Edward Agyekum Kufuor pays courtesy visit to Dr. Bawumia, discusses youth empowerment and unity
    May 13, 2026
    Jomoro MP Dorcas Affo-Toffey revives abandoned Nuba KG project, pledges completion within two months
    May 13, 2026
  • Entertainment
    EntertainmentShow More
    Rema, Tyla, others to headline FIFA World Cup 2026 Opening Ceremony
    May 13, 2026
    The entire concept and creative direction were my intellectual property – Nana Akua Addo responds
    May 13, 2026
    Three times Black Sherif served style and stardom at  2026 TGMA
    May 13, 2026
    Alex Ekubo’s death linked to prolonged liver cancer battle – Stanley Ontop
    May 13, 2026
    Afro-Jamaican star Barbee dazzles at the 2026 TGMA debut with custom couture look
    May 13, 2026
  • Sports
    SportsShow More
    Tolon Constituency: Tolon Team A wins Soyalana Gala tournament, takes home GHS 20,000
    May 12, 2026
    Tolon: Two players from Soyalana Gala tournament selected for National U-20 team
    May 12, 2026
    Lord Sebastian Coe calls for greater youth participation as Accra hosts African Athletics Championship
    May 11, 2026
    FIFA Global Citizen Education Fund awards grants to first Group of Community-Based Organizations Providing Children with Access to Quality Education and Sports
    May 11, 2026
    World Athletics President arrives in Ghana for 24th African Seniors Athletics Championship
    May 9, 2026
  • Technology
    TechnologyShow More
    Yahoo Finance spotlights Katon Meet as a strong video conferencing platform
    May 7, 2026
    African-Led ANH-ARC platform launches in Ghana to transform food systems, nutrition and health
    May 2, 2026
    Amardeep Singh Hari named Ghana’s most influential tech entrepreneur of all time
    April 30, 2026
    Yellow Card publishes 2026 report on data protection and AI governance
    April 23, 2026
    Master AI and cybersecurity to fight fake news – Dr Zanetor Rawlings to Ghana’s youth
    April 22, 2026
  • International
    InternationalShow More
    Gov’t rescues 28 Ghanaian trafficking victims from Côte d’Ivoire
    May 11, 2026
    World Athletics President arrives in Ghana for 24th African Seniors Athletics Championship
    May 9, 2026
    Deputy Transport Minister expands China visit to tourism, arts and cultural cooperation
    May 7, 2026
    PSG hold Bayern to reach back-to-back Champions League finals
    May 6, 2026
    Arsenal beat Atletico Madrid to secure Champions League final spot
    May 6, 2026
  • Factometer
Search
© 2024 EIB Network Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: The Gambia where sex beasts are buying African children and toddlers to rape
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Starr FmStarr Fm
Font ResizerAa
  • Headlines
  • Election Hub
  • General
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Factometer
Search
  • Headlines
  • Election Hub
  • General
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Factometer
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2024 EIB Network Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
Editors PickFeatures

The Gambia where sex beasts are buying African children and toddlers to rape

Starrfm.com.gh By Starrfm.com.gh Published January 17, 2020
Share
SHARE

TRAGIC Gambian children are being sold to British paedophiles for as little as £2-a-time by their desperate parents, Sun Online can reveal.

Contents
Children sold for £2Locals ‘desperate’ after Thomas Cook collapse‘She didn’t look comfortable at all’Tots hand-in-hand with ‘paedos’Pensioners taking teens to hotels‘White men approach little boys and girls’Child abuse scourgePredator free

Huge numbers of predators are taking advantage of lax laws in the poverty-stricken African country to embark on sick child abuse holidays where they openly target little boys and girls.

 A tourist wades into the sea with a small African child in The Gambia - where child sex abuse is rife
12
A tourist wades into the sea with a small African child in The Gambia – where child sex abuse is rifeCredit: My Story Media
 A man with a British accent holds a scared toddler in his arms
12
A man with a British accent holds a scared toddler in his arms

Sun Online saw first hand how poor Gambian children can be vulnerable to British paedos when we visited the beach resorts that dot Kololi on the country’s picturesque Atlantic coastline.

Our reporter was constantly shocked by the number of unaccompanied African minors he saw being cared for by middle-aged, Western men who did not appear to be their biological fathers.

The encounters witnessed included a girl aged between six and eight having lunch with a balding, white haired man in a restaurant filled with similarly aged tourists.

The same day we saw a stoutly built man in his 50s or 60s wading into the ocean gripping the hand of a tiny African child in white swimming shorts.

Equally unsettling was the sight of a Gambian toddler watching wide-eyed with fear as a middle-aged white woman got into a fist fight with a young black prostitute at a popular beach bar.

It was 11.30pm at night and the air was thick with cigarette smoke. The child, no older than two, was being held closely by a white man with a British accent.

12

Children sold for £2

Our investigation comes as experts warn that the economic crisis unleashed by the collapse of travel firm Thomas Cook is helping turn the former British colony into a “paedophile paradise” where perverts can operate unchecked.

Thomas Cook flew 45 per cent of The Gambia’s 100,000 annual visitors from the UK to the capital Banjul until it went into liquidation under the weight of its debts in September.

In an exclusive interview, Lamin Fatty, the National Coordinator of the Child Protection Alliance in The Gambia, reveals that both male and female tourists are targeting African minors.

He warns: “Sex is cheap in my country and children are being sold for as little as 150 dalasis, or just over £2 in your currency.

“Some of the parents know their children are being abused and they accept it because they are so desperate for food in their bellies.

“Others are too naïve to realise. They think the Westerner is paying their bills and helping their boy or girl out of the kindness of their heart, while in reality they have bad intentions.

“Child abuse is going on all the time in The Gambia and the government is not doing enough to put a stop to it.

“Our children are being approached directly on the beaches or the street and child abusers from all over Europe including the UK are coming here for this.

“I want to make clear that this does not just involve men but also adult women who are paying for sex with teenage boys in The Gambia.

“We have laws that are supposed to stop this from happening but they are not being enforced so we have become a paradise for paedophiles.”

Locals ‘desperate’ after Thomas Cook collapse

 Two school-age girls play at the feet of two men, their mums nowhere in sight
12
Two school-age girls play at the feet of two men, their mums nowhere in sightCredit: My Story Media
 A tourist, in the yellow top, sits beside a young black boy at a café
12
A tourist, in the yellow top, sits beside a young black boy at a caféCredit: My Story Media

As tourism makes up one-third of the country’s GDP, there are fears that businesses will go bust and locals will go hungry following an estimated 50 per cent drop in economic activity that has already hit beach resorts.

Lawyer and children’s rights advocate Malick Jallow told Sun Online: “While some tourists will always want to help poor Gambians, others will see this situation as an opportunity to exploit young children.

“The problem is that the abuse is sometimes carried out with the blessing of the parents because they are so in need.

“The perception is that white people, or ‘toubabs’ as they call them, have stacks of cash and these parents are often excited that their child has attracted the attention of a white man.

“It actually makes them feel proud so they give their permission for the boy or girl to go with the person and when the police try to question them they will not co-operate.”

‘She didn’t look comfortable at all’

 Lamin Fatty, National Coordinator of the Children’s Protection Alliance, said this boy shouldn't be in a bar so late at night, adding: "We do not encourage physical affection with minors"
12
Lamin Fatty, National Coordinator of the Children’s Protection Alliance, said this boy shouldn’t be in a bar so late at night, adding: “We do not encourage physical affection with minors”Credit: My Story Media

Former Thomas Cook rep Anne Heap, 53, from Wigan, said: “These people are as poor as poor can be — it’s rare to see a child wearing shoes — and there isn’t any other trade for them outside tourism.

“Thomas Cook used to always give us an extra 10kg luggage allowance so the workers and passengers could bring aid boxes to The Gambia — basic things like clothes, medicine and school equipment.

“The first thing I thought of when we went under was, ‘What is going to happen to people in The Gambia?’ We were the only airline flying directly there.

“I’ve heard that crime has already shot up as there is not enough money coming in — the hand that feeds them is gone.

“Sex tourism is already huge in The Gambia — some bars are like brothels — and I do worry that more children will get lured into prostitution to feed their families.

“When I was working there I would see old men walking with girls as young as 10, 11 or 12. There is a dark side to The Gambia.

“One time when we were flying back to Manchester there was a British man in his 70s with a girl who was only about eight or nine. This was about eight years ago.

“I was so concerned about what was going on that I got chatting to him outside the toilet during the flight. I wanted to speak to the girl too but she never left her seat, she didn’t look comfortable at all.

“I reported it and border security later told me the man had been ‘apprehended’ but I was not able to find out what happened to him or the girl after that.”

Tots hand-in-hand with ‘paedos’

 A child smiles on the beach in The Gambia, where thousands of Brits flock every year. There's no suggestion he is caught up in the child sex tourism trade
12
A child smiles on the beach in The Gambia, where thousands of Brits flock every year. There’s no suggestion he is caught up in the child sex tourism tradeCredit: My Story Media
 We came across a number of tourists with young children in the West African resort
12
We came across a number of tourists with young children in the West African resortCredit: My Story Media

There is no proof to suggest that any of the men we pictured were paedophiles.

However the experts we showed our dossier of photos to said the police should have questioned them according to Gambian child protection laws.

Lamin Fatty said: “This does worry me because, if the children are unaccompanied, they should not be alone in tourist areas without their parents.

“It is also forbidden for a child to be in a bar so late at night and we do not encourage physical affection with minors.

“I work with young girls and boys and I would not hug them or pick them up, it is not appropriate.”

Malick Jallow added: “I would have questioned these men had I seen them myself. As a lawyer and an activist, I would want to know if they have the authority to be caring for that child.

I’ve seen a number of tiny African children walking around with big white men.”

“We have a lot of good Samaritans coming to The Gambia but we also have people who use charity as a front to hide their bad intentions.

“The security guards should have questioned these men but there is a culture of inferiority here and they would have been scared to challenge a wealthy Westerner.”

British tourists can still fly to The Gambia via Lisbon with the TAP airline or via Casablanca with Royal Air Maroc. There is also a limited direct service run by ‘The Gambia Experience’ company and package deals can be snapped up for just over £500 a person.

Pensioners taking teens to hotels

 Older British women are famed for holidaying in The Gambia, where some pick up African gigolos
12
Older British women are famed for holidaying in The Gambia, where some pick up African gigolosCredit: My Story Media

Health care assistant Lucy Mendy, 33, from Gloucester, was trying to enjoy a winter holiday in the country she has come to see as a second home — but says she was shocked by some of the things she had witnessed during her trip.

She said: “I’ve seen old men taking girls looking as young as 15 or 16-years-old to their hotel room.

“It made me feel sick and I wish I could have intervened, but this is not the UK and I was scared what might have happened if I tried to confront them.

“People here are so poor, some of them will do anything for money, even if it means giving their bodies to a tourist.”

 Marjorie said the impact of Thomas Cook closing down was clear to see in the resort
12
Marjorie said the impact of Thomas Cook closing down was clear to see in the resort

Lucy’s mum, pensioner Marjorie Botton, 68, also from Gloucester, added: “The collapse of Thomas Cook has hit people so hard.

“They are getting half as many British tourists and that means they might not make enough money to get through the quiet season, which starts in April.”

Dutch tourist Corina Bouwman also witnessed suspected child abuse during her two week, winter vacation in December.

The social worker, 54, said: “I’ve seen a number of tiny African children walking around with big white men.

“On each occasion I thought, ‘What is going on here? Where is the child’s mother?’

“But I didn’t want to accuse anyone in case I had misread the situation.”

‘White men approach little boys and girls’

Father-of-four Abdullah Labamba, 48, runs a fruit stand next to one of the many hotels that line Kololi’s palm-tree fringed beach and says he has witnessed paedophiles targeting vulnerable child workers selling peanuts for less than £1 a bag.

He said: “I’ve seen white men approach the little boys and girls right here on the beach. I do my best to stop them.

“I tell the children, ‘Get out of here, this is not a safe place for you.’

 Fruit seller Abdullah Labamba, pictured, says paedos often target vulnerable child workers selling peanuts
12
Fruit seller Abdullah Labamba, pictured, says paedos often target vulnerable child workers selling peanutsCredit: My Story Media

“The children will run away but they normally come back. It’s shocking.

“Their parents are desperate for money and they know they won’t be allowed home until they have sold at least five bags.

“Some men try to take advantage of that by offering them £50 for the whole basket. Then they will ask them to come back to go somewhere private.”

Child abuse scourge

Tragically, child abuse is now endemic in The Gambia, where 60 per cent of the 1.9m population live below the poverty line.

Previous research has shown that paedophiles often pose as charity workers and Good Samaritans so they can befriend poor families — and UNICEF has warned that The Gambia is one of Africa’s top destinations for child sex tourism.

The Gambian government meanwhile has tried to crack down and in 2013 introduced new laws allowing them to seize hotel properties if children are knowingly abused on the premises.

They also pledged to give out “hefty fines” and “stiff sentences” to paedophiles that are caught.

 The Gambia boasts hot weather all year round
12
The Gambia boasts hot weather all year roundCredit: My Story Media

But incredibly there has been only one successful prosecution since laws were tightened and that man ended up being pardoned by the president.

Norwegian teacher Svein Agesandakar, 57, was found guilty of abusing six children, the youngest aged three, in 2006.

The court heard how he had tricked his way into a hard-up Gambian family by posing as a do-gooder, giving the parents sacks of rice and new shoes in exchange for time alone with their large brood of six kids in a hotel room.

The paedophile had separate convictions for child abuse in Norway but was sentenced to just three years in jail.

Then, in 2018 President Adama Barrow decided to pardon him for reasons that have never been explained.

The pardon was later revoked amidst a public outcry but experts fear his case has given a green light to other paedophiles.

Predator free

In October last year an official UN investigation found that Gambia’s tourist areas continue to be a dangerous place for children and that predators now stay in motels and private apartments so they can avoid prying eyes.

UN Special Rapporteur Maud de Boer-Buquicchio reported: “The rare instances when complaints are lodged with the police are not duly acted upon, the gathering of compelling evidence is delayed, and investigation and prosecution is stalled, resulting in victims or witnesses withdrawing their complaints.

“Some cases have also reportedly been dismissed on the grounds that statements by child victims were allegedly inconsistent.”

Our report comes after the UK government was slammed for failing to protect children overseas  from British predators.

A report by the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) found more needs to be done to make sure offenders operating in poor countries like The Gambia are caught and prosecuted.

 

Source: The Sun

You Might Also Like

The Damang Gold and the Economy of Ghana: State Ownership versus Ibrahim Mahama’s E&P

Thoughts of a Ghanaian Youth: Has Ghana Really Progressed Since 1992?

Ghana’s Film Industry Is Not Broke, It Is Stuck

Parentage, Not Paternity: Why Ghana’s Proposed Bill on Compulsory Paternity Testing Risks Becoming State-Sanctioned Discrimination Against Mothers

Sold Dreams, Stolen Lives: Inside the Ivorian Camps Where Over 450 Ghanaians Are Trapped in Trafficking Nightmare

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Share
Previous Article EC awards data centre contract to Persol Systems Limited
Next Article E/R: Residents invade Police station; demand blood of arrested robbers

Starr 103.5FM

Starr FmStarr Fm
Follow US
© 2024 EIB Network Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
newsletter icon
Join Us!

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest in news, podcasts etc..

[mc4wp_form]
Zero spam, Unsubscribe at any time.
adbanner
AdBlock Detected
Our site is an advertising supported site. Please whitelist to support our site.
Okay, I'll Whitelist
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?