NAIROBI, Kenya — Nairobi County’s Executive Committee Member for Citizen Engagement and Customer Service, Geoffrey Mosiria, has issued a stark public warning over what he describes as the proliferation of illegal massage parlours and covert prostitution businesses operating within residential estates in the capital’s Kilimani area.
In a statement posted on his official X (formerly Twitter) account on Friday, January 9, 2026, Mr Mosiria said many of the establishments operate under the guise of massage services but are neither licensed nor authorised by the county government.
“I want to bring to the attention of Nairobians, and Kenyans at large, that most of the massage signages you see in KILIMANI and other parts of the city, especially those with graphics that suggest sexuality and only display a phone number, are illegal and not licensed by the county government,” Mosiria said.
According to the county official, the businesses exploit regulatory blind spots by installing their signboards under cover of darkness and running operations from short-stay rental apartments within residential neighbourhoods, making detection difficult.
“These signages are usually put up at night. Most of these establishments are actually brothels operating illegal prostitution businesses. They normally run this business within residential estates, making them very hard to recognise unless one is keen enough,” he added.
Hidden cameras and extortion fears
Mosiria further warned that some of the facilities allegedly use hidden surveillance cameras to secretly record clients, later using the footage for blackmail and extortion.
“I call upon people, especially men, to be very careful. In the process of engaging in these illegal activities, they are secretly recorded using hidden cameras, and the footage is later used to extort money, with threats of the videos being exposed,” Mosiria said.
Such practices, he noted, pose serious risks not only to personal safety and privacy but also to social stability.
Appeal to families and married couples
In unusually direct remarks, Mosiria urged married women to remain vigilant about unexplained visits by their partners to short-stay rentals, warning that such secrecy has contributed to rising domestic breakdowns.
“I am also appealing to married women to closely monitor their men, especially when they say they are visiting friends. This is how many marriages break up through secrecy, deception, and involvement in illegal activities,” he said.
He said the issue had been allowed to grow largely unchecked due to reluctance among public leaders to speak openly about it.
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“No leader may have the courage to condemn these acts, but as the officer tasked with communication and citizen engagement, I believe this is the right time to expose this rot in society and protect our families and communities,” Mosiria added.
The warning comes amid mounting concerns in Nairobi over the misuse of short-term rental platforms for illegal commercial sex, cyber-blackmail, and drug-related activities.
Security agencies have in recent months stepped up surveillance of residential zones in Kilimani, Westlands and parts of Kileleshwa following reports of rising criminal syndicates operating from such facilities.
County officials say further enforcement operations targeting unlicensed premises are expected in the coming weeks as part of a broader urban safety campaign.







