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Air BnBs Under Scrutiny as Report Links Short-Stay Rentals to Rising GBV, Proposes Mandatory CCTV

Kenya’s fast-growing staycation culture has been thrust into the national spotlight after a government report linked short-stay rentals, Airbnb-style accommodations and lodgings to the country’s escalating gender-based violence (GBV) crisis, proposing mandatory CCTV surveillance as part of urgent reforms.

The report, presented to President William Ruto, reveals that 1,639 women were killed between 2022 and 2024, with 77 per cent of the cases committed by intimate partners or people known to the victims.

Women aged 30 to 44 years are the most affected, while Nairobi, Nakuru and Meru counties record the highest number of cases. Officials warn the figures likely understate the true scale of the crisis due to widespread underreporting.

As domestic tourism surges, particularly in urban centres, the Technical Working Group (TWG) found that some short-stay rentals and commercial lodgings have increasingly become sites of GBV, enabled by weak regulation, limited oversight and inadequate security measures.

To address this, the report recommends mandatory installation of CCTV and other security surveillance systems in all short-stay rentals, lodgings and commercial accommodation facilities by September 31, 2026.

The directive would be jointly implemented by the Ministry of Tourism and Wildlife and the Ministry of Interior and National Administration, marking the first time Kenya’s hospitality sector has been formally integrated into a national GBV prevention strategy.

The TWG, chaired by former Deputy Chief Justice Nancy Baraza, concluded that systemic failures are fuelling the crisis. Among them are the absence of legal recognition of femicide as a distinct offence, slow and often retraumatising justice processes, family and community interference that blocks prosecutions, and fragmented data systems that weaken early intervention.

The report also flags the role of social media, noting that while digital platforms have amplified awareness, they have simultaneously fuelled victim-blaming, misinformation and harmful narratives.

The findings paint a grim national picture: 34 per cent of Kenyan women have experienced physical violence since the age of 15, while 13 per cent have experienced sexual violence in their lifetime.

Beyond surveillance, the TWG calls for GBV and femicide to be declared a national crisis, legal recognition of femicide as a specific criminal offence, and the criminalisation of out-of-court settlements that silence survivors.

It further urges the expansion of survivor support services, including one-stop recovery centres in all counties, strengthened mental health and trauma care, and economic empowerment programmes to reduce vulnerability.

To close critical data gaps, the report proposes the creation of a national GBV and femicide database, a real-time femicide dashboard, and tighter regulation of digital spaces to protect survivors. It also recommends establishing a National GBV and Femicide Fund alongside ring-fenced county budgets to guarantee sustained financing.

In a pointed message to policymakers and the public, the TWG stresses that GBV and femicide are not private family matters, but violations of constitutional rights that increasingly cut across homes, online spaces and even weekend getaways.

As Kenya embraces staycations as part of its domestic tourism boom, the report signals a clear shift: safety, accountability and survivor protection must now be built into every booking.

CH Reporter

CH Reporter

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