Warning: Contains disturbing content and graphic descriptions of sexual acts
A man running a sex ring operating out of Dubai’s most glamorous neighbourhoods, and exploiting vulnerable women, has been identified by a BBC investigation.
Charles Mwesigwa, who says he is a former London bus driver, told our undercover reporter he could provide women for a sex party at a starting price of US$1 000 (N$17 340), adding that many can do “pretty much everything” clients want them to.
Rumours of wild sex parties in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have circulated for years.
The hashtag #Dubaiportapotty, which has been viewed more than 450 million times on TikTok, links to parodies and speculative exposés of women accused of being money-hungry influencers secretly funding their lifestyles by fulfilling the most excessive of sexual requests.
Our BBC World Service investigation was told the reality is even darker.
Young Ugandan women told us they had not expected to have to undertake sex work for Mwesigwa.
In some cases, they believed they were travelling to the UAE to work in places like supermarkets or hotels.
At least one of Mwesigwa’s clients regularly asks to defecate on the women, according to ‘Mia’, whose name we have changed to protect her identity, and who says she was trapped by Mwesigwa’s network.
DENIAL
Mwesigwa denies the allegations. He says he helps women find accommodation through landlords, and that women follow him to parties because of his wealthy Dubai contacts.
We have also discovered that two women linked to Mwesigwa have died, having fallen from high-rise apartments. Although their deaths were ruled as suicides, their friends and family feel the police should have investigated further.
Mwesigwa said the incidents were investigated by the Dubai police and asked us to contact them for information. They did not reply to our request.
One of the women who lost her life, Monic Karungi, arrived in Dubai from western Uganda.
She found herself sharing a flat with dozens of other women working for Mwesigwa, according to one of the women, who we are calling Keira, who says she lived with Monic there in 2022.
“[His] place was like a market . . . There were like 50 girls. She was not happy because what she expected is not what she got,” Keira says.
Monic thought the job in Dubai was going to be in a supermarket, according to her sister Rita.
“He [Mwesigwa] was violent when I told him I wanted to go back home,” says Mia, who also knew Monic in Dubai.
She says when she first arrived, he told her she already owed him US$2 711 (about N$46 970) and that within two weeks that debt had doubled.
“Money for air tickets, for your visa, for where you’re sleeping, food,” says Mia.
“That means you have to work hard, hard, hard, pleading for men to come and sleep [with] you.”
Monic owed Mwesigwa more than US$27 000 (about N$468 360) after several weeks, according to what a relative of hers we are calling Michael says she told him.
He says he received tearful voice notes from her.
EXTREME FETISHES
Mia says clients were mostly white Europeans, and included men with extreme fetishes.
“There’s this one client, he poops on girls. He poops and he tells them to eat the shit,” she explains quietly.
Another woman we are calling Lexi, who says she was tricked by a different network, echoed Mia’s story, saying “porta potty” requests were frequent.
“There was a client who said: ‘We pay you 15 000 Arab Emirates dirham (about N$70 950) to gang-rape you, pee in your face, beat you, and add in 5 000 (N$23 650) for being recorded eating faeces’.
Her experiences have led her to believe there is a racial element to this extreme fetish.
“Every time I said I wouldn’t want to do that, it seemed to get them more interested. They want somebody who is going to cry and scream and run. And that somebody [in their eyes] should be a black person.”
‘CAUSING PROBLEMS’
Lexi says she tried to get help from the only people she thought could intervene – the police.
But she says they told her: “You Africans cause problems for each other. We don’t want to get involved. And they would hang up.”
We put this allegation to the Dubai police and they did not reply.
Lexi eventually escaped back to Uganda and now helps to rescue and support women in similar situations.
Finding Charles Mwesigwa wasn’t easy. We could only find one picture of him online – and it was taken from behind. He also uses multiple names across social media.
But through a combination of open-source intelligence, undercover research, and information from a former member of his network, we traced him to a middle-class neighbourhood in Dubai – Jumeirah Village Circle.
To corroborate what sources had told us about his business – supplying women for degrading sex acts – we sent in an undercover reporter posing as an event organiser sourcing women for high-end parties.
Mwesigwa appeared calm and confident when speaking about his business.
‘OPEN-MINDED’
“We’ve got like 25 girls,” he said. “Many are open-minded . . . they can do pretty much everything.”
He explained the cost – from US$1 000 (N$17 340) per girl per night, but more for ‘crazy stuff’.
He invited our reporter for a ‘sample night’.
When asked about ‘Dubai porta potty’, he replied: “I’ve told you, they are open-minded. When I say open-minded… I will send you the craziest I have.”
In the course of the conversation, Mwesigwa said he used to be a London bus driver. We have seen evidence he put that occupation down on an official document in east London in 2006.
He went on to tell our reporter that he loved this business.
“I could win the lottery, a million pounds, but I would still do it… it’s become part of me.”
Troy, a man who says he used to act as operations manager for Mwesigwa’s network, gave us more information about how he says it is run.
He says Mwesigwa pays off security at various nightclubs so they will let his women in to find clients.
“I’ve heard about types of sex that I’ve never seen in my life. It doesn’t matter what you go through as long as his rich men are happy… [the women] have no escape route…They see musicians, they see footballers, they see presidents.”
Mwesigwa has been able to get away with running this operation, Troy claims, because Troy and others are not just used as drivers.
He says their names are also used by Mwesigwa to hire cars and apartments, so that his own name never appears on the paperwork.
DEATH
On 27 April 2022, Monic posted a selfie from Al Barsha – a residential neighbourhood popular with expats in Dubai. Four days later, she was dead. She had been in the emirate for just four months.
According to Mia, Monic and Mwesigwa had been regularly arguing in the period before she left. Mia says Monic had been refusing to comply with Mwesigwa’s demands and had found a way out of his network.
“She had got some kind of job. She was very excited. She thought she was gonna get free, she was going to get her life back because now that was a real job, no sleeping with men,” Mia says.
Monic moved out to a different apartment about 10 minutes’ walk away. It was from this apartment’s balcony that she fell on 1 May 2022.
Monic’s relative Michael, who was in the UAE at the time she died, says he tried to get answers.
The police told him they stopped their investigation, having found drugs and alcohol in the apartment Monic had fallen from, and only her fingerprints on the balcony, he says.
He obtained a death certificate for Monic from a hospital, but it did not say how she had died. And her family were unable to obtain a toxicology report for her.
But a Ghanaian man living in the apartment building was more helpful, he says, taking him to another block to meet the man he said was Monic’s boss.
Michael describes the scene when he got there and saw where the women were housed.
He says through the cloud of shisha smoke in the living room, he made out what looked like cocaine on the table and women having sex on chairs with clients.
He claims he found the man we had previously identified as Charles Mwesigwa in bed with two women, and that when he tried to drag him to the police, Mwesigwa replied: “I have spent 25 years in Dubai. Dubai is mine.
There is no way you are going to report me . . . Embassy is me, I’m the embassy.
“[Monic’s] not the first to die. And she won’t be the last,” he added, according to Michael.
Mia and Keira both independently say they witnessed this conversation and both confirm its wording. When we asked Mwesigwa what he meant by this, he denied having said it.
Monic’s death shares haunting similarities with that of Kayla Birungi, another Ugandan woman who lived in the same neighbourhood as her, and died in 2021 after falling from a Dubai high-rise apartment which we have evidence to suggest was managed by Mwesigwa.
The phone number for her landlord, shared with us by Kayla’s family, turned out to be one of Mwesigwa’s numbers.
Troy also confirms that Mwesigwa managed the apartment, as do four other women we spoke to for this investigation.
– Get the rest of this story on bbc.com
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