Tactics include face-to-face reconciliation, paramilitary aid and vigilante justice
Entrapment of LGBTQ+ Nigerians through dating apps and social media has been documented for years, yet most perpetrators continue to walk free. Now, queer people are turning to alternative forms of justice to address the law enforcement gap. Trigger warning: This story contains a reference to suicide and descriptions of violence.
With his muscular frame and deep voice, Korede (pseudonym) often command attention, except when he starts crying.
He cried a lot after a video of him naked and being tortured by stick-wielding men was shared on social media. Once again, shame stripped down his voice and demeanor as he recounted his story. He had lost his job and home and had been rejected by friends, who said he embarrassed them.
“I feel shame whenever I remember,” he said.
At 35, Korede can be considered straight-passing — a term used to describe gay people whose sexuality is not immediately apparent from their appearance or behavior.
His ordeal began when he met DJ Rati, a local disc jockey, at a party in Asaba, Delta, south-south Nigeria. Their fondness for each other grew so much that Korede considered him a friend not long after they met.
DJ Rati invited Korede to his home. It was not out of place. Both men had spent time together in Korede’s apartment many times. On the day Korede visited, the DJ’s sister was in the single-room apartment but soon left to give both men privacy. Korede remembered it being a sunny afternoon. He asked to take a quick shower and also requested cold water.
“I didn’t know that he had made arrangements with some of his friends in the street,” Korede recalled. “As I was pulling my clothes… the three boys ran to the house, started beating me with cutlasses and bottles, and videoed me. I was trying to cover myself. They dragged me outside. I was begging, but they refused to listen to me.”
DJ Rati and his friends demanded ₦500,000 (around $331). They called all of Korede’s friends to demand ransom. No one sent money. DJ Rati and his friends let Korede go after hours of ridicule and after they had taken humiliating videos of him. They warned him that those videos would be released online if he failed to send the ₦500,000 ransom.
Korede tried to raise the ransom. He asked his boss for a salary advance. He tried to sell some of his properties, but half a million naira was hard to come by in a country where the minimum wage is less than $50 per month. Two days passed, and he had yet to send the money. Then he started getting calls from friends. The video had been released.
“It was a very terrible experience,” he said. “I wanted to kill myself. I was watching it, and God, I can’t bear this… I’m ashamed. Actually, I’m ashamed.”
He relocated to another community where he hoped no one would recognise him from the video, but his life had been upended.
What Korede described is a classic case of catfishing and blackmailing targeted at queer people.
In Nigeria, it is called kito, a term in the local LGBTQ+ community used to describe the ill luck of falling victim to harassment, blackmail, and physical violence by someone believed to be another gay person.
Although the origin of the word is unclear, the perpetrators of Kito often use dating apps or social media to target their victims. The blackmailers pose as gay men looking to make friends before eventually hurting their victims. They use threats of exposure to force victims to comply with their demands. In many cases, their demands include sexual favours and money. When victims fail to meet these demands, like Korede, they are humiliated.
“These stories are quite rampant,” said Uyaiedu Ikpe-Etim, a Nigerian filmmaker who openly lives as a gay woman in Nigeria. The perpetrators of this crime are emboldened by the Same-Sex Marriage Prohibition Act (SSMPA), a law that criminalises same-sex relations in Nigeria.
The “anti-gay law” also forbids the registration of organisations that seek to advocate for the rights of LGBTQ people in the country. It was signed into law by former President Goodluck Jonathan in 2014, and offenders can be punished with up to 14 years in prison.
Human Rights Watch said the law had been used to justify widespread discrimination and violence against LGBTQ+ individuals in Nigeria and accused the police of being complicit. Since its enactment, there have been reports of increased violence against LGBT individuals, said Walter Ude, a contributor on the Kito Diaries blog. This blog documents violence against gay people in Nigeria and puts a face on the perpetrators.
“The SSMPA legitimises homophobia; it legitimises attacks on queer people and you find out that some of these acts are also [aided] by police officers,” Ude said.
‘Police is of no use’
When Chinedu*, another victim of Kito, heard his blackmailer had been arrested and taken to the police station, he thought he would get justice for the humiliation he suffered. At the police station, Chinedu said he was shocked at how quickly the police turned against him when the man who had blackmailed him told them it was a “gay affair” and that Chinedu had refused to pay him after having sex with him. He said the police would no longer listen to him or let him dispel the lies his blackmailer was telling them.
Chinedu met his blackmailer, Emmanuel Nwana, on Grindr, a dating platform for members of the LGBTQ+ community. They chatted for a week, then decided to meet for the first time. Chinedu said he was surprised when he met the person behind the Grindr account. The person who had come to meet him was different from the person in the profile picture or the many other photos they had exchanged on the app.
“I did not want to create a scene at my workplace because that was where we met,” he said. “ I made a brief conversation with him and asked that we meet another time because I needed to get back to work. That was where the trouble started. He asked for his transport fare. I gave him ₦3,000 but he said it was not enough. He then demanded ₦500,000 for his service. I was shocked.
“He created a big scene at my office. My boss was very angry. He told me to take some time off and that I would be called back when the matter died down. I was never called back. I lost my job because of that, and I have not been able to get another job.”
Chinedu’s story was corroborated in a police report seen by this reporter at the State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID) in Yaba, a suburb of Lagos.
Nwana had appeared on Kito Diaries more than once. People who had fallen victim to his ploy identified him when his picture was posted on the blog. His phone number and other identifiers, including the names he goes by — Emmanuel and Kalifa were most mentioned — were revealed.
On Truecaller, the caller-identification app, the phone number one of his victims provided was identified as “Kalifa Grndr Lag” but his government name is Emmanuel Nwana, according to police records. At least four people told this reporter that Emmanuel is notorious for targeting gay men on dating apps.
Chinedu, other victims, and gay rights activists, who all had offered to testify against Nwana at the Yaba police state where he was taken to after he was arrested, all abandoned the case when they realised that the officers in charge had turned against them. The policemen were no longer interested in the crime reported but in their sexuality, said James*, a gay-rights activist who works with an organisation that helps get justice for Kito victims.
“All the witnesses ran away,” he said. “I was lucky to escape when the police said they would do a sodomy test on us. They want to check our anus to see if it has been penetrated. Emmanuel was pointing at everyone and calling us his gay sexual partners because he knew the case would turn on us if he said that.”
Kito is a direct result of institutionalised discrimination against the LGBTQ+ community, said Remi Makinde, interim executive director of The Initiative for Equal Rights (TIERs). According to Makinde, who uses the pronouns they/them, this violence persists because perpetrators know queer people are unlikely to report mistreatment based on their sexual orientation, gender identity, and expression.
At least ten people interviewed for this piece said police were complicit in their extortion or that they got no help when they reported to the police. Kola*, a teenage university student, reported to the police a few days after he was released by a gang that lured him to their house and extorted over ₦500,000 from his guardians.
“You’ve heard stories about this kind of stuff, and you feel that people that it happened to are people that are actually careless,” Kola said. He wanted the gang arrested, so he reported to the police, telling them all the facts except his sexuality.
“I told them I have a tracking of my phone, I have a photographic memory of how to get there,” he said, but the police would not budge unless he gave them money. “With time, I feel like I know I need to catch them, but there’s no actual agency or a force that would really put in their best for somebody that has nothing to offer to them. …no matter how you’d speak to the police, it’s useless. They will just make it worse.”
We would like to offer our contribution from Italy with the site https://ricattosessuale.it/ (from the menu at the top right you can change the language of the site) where it is possible to delve deeper into the topic of sexual extortion after video chats or sending intimate images, with even free advice from top experts in the sector, with over 14 years of skills acquired in the field. An OBSERVATORY ON SEXUAL BLACKMAIL has been established with news on the topic of sextortion in ITALY AND IN THE WORLD updated every month https://ricattosessuale.it/category/osservatorio-ricatti-sessuali-in-italia/ Furthermore, an important online petition entitled “Online sexual blackmail: we need a COMPUTER EDUCATOR in schools”. This petition requires maximum support to establish a new professional figure in all schools in Italy: “the IT educator”. Responsible for informing and training middle and high school students on the dangers of the internet (not only those linked to sexual extortion) and on the defenses to be put in place to prevent or combat the phenomenon of cyberbullying. You can sign here https://ricattosessuale.it/firma-la-petizione-ricatto-sessuale-online-occorre-un-educatore-informatico-nelle-scuole/
Finally we have identified a checklist to independently assess the level of danger after having suffered sexual blackmail. You can take the TEST on this page https://ricattosessuale.it/minaccia-di-pubblicare-foto-intime/
We would like to offer our contribution from Italy with the site https://ricattosessuale.it/ (from the menu at the top right you can change the language of the site) where it is possible to delve deeper into the topic of sexual extortion after video chats or sending intimate images, with even free advice from top experts in the sector, with over 14 years of skills acquired in the field. An OBSERVATORY ON SEXUAL BLACKMAIL has been established with news on the topic of sextortion in ITALY AND IN THE WORLD updated every month https://ricattosessuale.it/category/osservatorio-ricatti-sessuali-in-italia/ Furthermore, an important online petition entitled “Online sexual blackmail: we need a COMPUTER EDUCATOR in schools”. This petition requires maximum support to establish a new professional figure in all schools in Italy: “the IT educator”. Responsible for informing and training middle and high school students on the dangers of the internet (not only those linked to sexual extortion) and on the defenses to be put in place to prevent or combat the phenomenon of cyberbullying. You can sign here https://ricattosessuale.it/firma-la-petizione-ricatto-sessuale-online-occorre-un-educatore-informatico-nelle-scuole/
Finally we have identified a checklist to independently assess the level of danger after having suffered sexual blackmail. You can take the TEST on this page https://ricattosessuale.it/minaccia-di-pubblicare-foto-intime/