Outrage after Russian man secretly records encounters with Kenyan women, uploads videos
The Russian man, only identified as Yaytseslav. PHOTO | COURTESY
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Over the past 24
hours, a man of Russian origin, only identified as Yaytseslav, has been
trending on various social media platforms, and all for the wrong reasons.
This follows
revelations that he has been secretly recording private encounters with
multiple women across Africa and sharing the videos on his social media pages.
His actions only
came to light recently after he released a series of videos featuring Ghanaian
women, which led to further discoveries.
A deeper look
revealed that Yaytseslav has reportedly shared videos of women from Kenya,
South Africa, Ghana, and many other African countries.
In the videos,
which have dominated conversations online, the Russian reprobate meets the
women on the streets or in shopping malls, casually introduces himself, strikes
up a light conversation and showers women with compliments before extending his
hand and, in most cases, leading the women in a quick, awkward salsa.
“Hello, what’s
your name? You look beautiful, I really like you. Can you please share your
phone number?” he is heard saying while approaching the women in some of the
clips.
Yaytseslav then
shares the short clips on TikTok and YouTube for free, while the full versions,
which probably feature X-rated activities, are available exclusively on his
private Telegram channel, where he charges a monthly subscription of $5.
In most of the
videos doing rounds online, unsuspecting women are seeing going about their day
as the Russian man approaches them.
At first, they
appear hesitant to talk but he quickly wins their trust before, somewhat
magically, convincing them to follow him to his rented apartments, where they
are now seen letting loose, getting cozy, interacting freely and even dancing
coyly.
The most shocking
part of these encounters is how easily the women appear to trust him, and how
unreasonably fast they agree to a private, intimate date at his random rented
homes, merely hours or days after meeting the man.
Appearing to only
be doing it for sport, and not necessarily sexual attraction, Yaytseslav picks
up just about any woman in the vicinity - a mother walking her kids home, a
random pair of middle-aged women at the market, a hotel attendant, a mall
guard, a supermarket merchandiser and random women idling around the market.
While the initial
interactions with the women are published for all to see, the Russian man
doesn't share what happens in the apartments he takes the women to, although he
does pointedly share that the women not only agreed for an intimate, indoors
date but also appear to be comfortably within the confines of his bed.
In one rather
daring instance, which explicitly demonstrates the Russian man's unbridled
notoriety, the freak attends Bishop Edward Mwai's Roysambu mega church where he
engages the preacher in a comical back and forth before convincing a worshipper
to follow him back to his residence.
Shockingly, she
obliges.
As outrage grew
over his actions, many online users began speculating how he managed to record
the women on the streets without their knowledge.
Some suggested
that he must have used Ray-Ban Smart Glasses, also known as Meta Glasses, to
film the unsuspecting women. This speculation arose after he was seen wearing
glasses that resembled the Meta devices.
The Ray-Ban Meta
glasses, developed with EssilorLuxottica's Ray-Ban, let's wearers take photos,
stream content and talk to an AI assistant.
The newest models
allow the wearer to capture 12MP photos, record 3K video, livestream to social
media, and interact with Meta AI to identify objects or translate languages in
real-time.
The fact that
someone would casually wear Meta glasses, armed with recording capabilities,
and expose so many women to ridicule and photographic exposure without their
consent, caused massive uproar amongst Kenyans online, with many vehemently
castigating the Russian man and others calling for his immediate arrest.
Journalist
Ferdinand Omondi wrote: "Guys. A foreigner travels to African countries,
engages in consensual sex with women, secretly records them, and then publishes
the videos online. The sex was consensual. The recording and distribution were
not. That is sexual exploitation."
He added:
"What’s troubling is that instead of focusing on the violation, many are
laughing at the women. Adults make personal choices every day. Some wise, some
risky. But no such personal decision cancels the right to privacy, and grants
one permission to secretly record and expose someone."
Omondi went on to
point out that the fact that the women agreed to the sexual pursuits did not
mean that they agreed to have their faces plastered to the world.
"We can
debate ethics, morality and safety. But those debates must not erase the
principle of consent. Consent to sex is not consent to filming. Consent to
filming is not consent to publication," he wrote.
Someone else said:
"This isn’t travel content, it’s predatory behavior dressed up as
vlogging. He is using African women as trophies for clicks. And instead of
outrage, there’s excitement in weaponizing this saga to shame women. All the
facts about how disgusting this man’s actions are get ignored, just so women
can be dragged."
Gladys Njoroge
wrote, "This behavior is criminal. It is predatory. And anyone laughing at
the victims is part of the problem. We cannot tolerate a world where
exploitation is dismissed as “mischief” or “bad luck.” It is violence. It is
abuse. And it must be condemned in the strongest terms."
Social commentator
Sholla Ard however wrote: "What disturbed me wasn’t just his behavior; it
was how easily trust was given to a stranger… while he openly mocked it in
Russian. Within minutes, phone numbers were shared. Within hours, some were in
his house. No background check. No verification. No caution. Hard truth: skin
color, nationality, charm, or perceived status does NOT equal safety. Predators
rely on speed. They exploit politeness, curiosity, loneliness, and lowered
guard."
Dorothy Waigwe
wrote, "Unfortunately, for black women the lure of white skin is an
achievement, something to brag about. White automatically is attractive and
smells of a better life, exotic so our sisters lower their guard and give in
easily no second thought because everything becomes a fantasy. How do you
meet a stranger and the next hour you are comfortable in their apartment?"
While the concept
of the pick-up artist is nothing new, experts are sounding the alarm over the
rise of so-called “manfluencers” who are covertly filming women to create
misogynistic content online.
In this online
sphere, women are often positioned “as a conquest, prize or reward,” Stephanie
Wescott, a feminist academic, writer and speaker, and a lecturer in Education,
Culture and Society at Australia’s Monash University, told CNN.
Smart glasses can
play into the hands of these content creators as they offer a clear message
about power, she warned. Namely, that men can “be watching, recording and
therefore controlling women’s images in public spaces without their knowledge
and therefore, that the public spaces belong to men."
For Wescott, the
phenomenon represents another example of the gendered abuse of technology – and
a danger for women that is difficult to anticipate. “The danger is the loss of
bodily autonomy without even being aware that it is happening,” she said.
In response to a
request for comment by CNN, Meta said: “Our glasses have an LED light that
activates whenever someone captures content, so it’s clear to others that the
device is recording and features tamper detection technology to prevent people
from covering that light."
Meta said its
terms of service clearly state its smart glasses should not be used to engage
in harmful activities like “harassment, infringing privacy rights, or capturing
sensitive information.”


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