For many women in Siaya County, gold does not glitter with hope. It cuts, humiliates, and devours. Beneath Abimbo’s dusty hills lies a hidden economy where survival costs dignity. Widows arrive searching for stones but find a system built on hunger, power, and sexual abuse.
Young men control the mines, the rocks, and the fate of desperate women. Poverty pushes widows underground. Culture silences them above ground. A report by Africa Uncensored exposed a trade that no one officially tracks, but everyone locally knows.
In Abimbo, sex has become currency, silence has become law, and survival has become a daily gamble that steals lives and futures.

How Sex in Siaya Gold Mines Became Currency
Siaya sits on the Busia-Kakamega greenstone belt, part of the wider Lake Victoria gold zone. Gold should mean opportunity. Instead, it entrenches inequality.
Abimbo Mines in Bondo Sub-County function like an informal kingdom run by young male diggers. They dig pits by hand, some nearly 200 feet deep. The walls tremble. The air suffocates. Yet these men hold the real power because they control the gold-bearing stones.
With about 1.1 million residents, Siaya has nearly 50,000 widows. One in every 25 people is a widow. Many have no land, no jobs, and no social safety net. The mines become their last option.
Women do not dig the deep pits. They crush, wash, and process stones brought by men. That dependence creates a cruel bargaining system known locally as “Apinde.” It means sex in exchange for stones.
Women told Africa Uncensored that refusal shuts them out completely. No sex means no stones. No stones means no income. No income means hunger at home.
Men pick the best rocks first. They keep the richest ore. Women get scraps unless they pay with money or their bodies. Even after paying, exploitation continues.
One woman explained plainly that young men use physical strength as leverage. They bring large amounts of good stones and expect sexual payment. The transaction happens openly, with little shame and zero accountability.
Older widows suffer the deepest wounds. A 51-year-old widow said young men, sometimes her children’s age, demand sex before releasing stones. She described this as painful and degrading, yet she feels trapped by poverty.
In many cases, sexual encounters take place right inside mining pits. Darkness becomes a cover for abuse. The ground becomes both workplace and bedroom. Safety disappears entirely.
Power, Pits, and Exploitation
The structure of Abimbo mines feeds abuse. Men dominate extraction. Women depend on access. That imbalance normalises coercion.
As pits dry up, women move from site to site. Each new mine repeats the same pattern. New men. Same demands. Same humiliation.
Local leaders rarely intervene. Police seldom visit. Chiefs often treat the issue as “community practice.” Silence protects perpetrators, not victims.
Some women have tried to fight back by entering the pits themselves. They dig, carry stones, and risk their lives underground. Even then, men still harass them.
Mining remains illegal in many areas, which keeps the sector unregulated. No formal rules mean no protection for women. No safety officers mean no rescue plans.
On March 3, 2023, tragedy struck Lumba Village in Rarieda Sub-County. A prohibited gold pit collapsed and killed at least five female artisanal miners. Their deaths highlighted how women face danger both from the earth and from men.
Money rarely compensates for risk. Most women earn little despite extreme labour. Middlemen buy gold cheaply and sell high. Women stay poor while others profit.
Health, Death, and Broken Promises
The sexual trade inside the mines carries severe health consequences. Many men refuse to use protection. Women lack power to negotiate safer sex.
HIV rates in Siaya remain among the highest in Kenya. A 2018 report showed prevalence at 15.35 per cent, almost three times the national average of 4.95 per cent. Widows suffer most, with infection rates reaching 26.4 per cent.
Mining sites worsen the crisis. Alcohol and marijuana circulate freely. Women reported that intoxicated men show no restraint, demanding sex regardless of age or circumstance.
A public inquiry report by the Kenya National Human Rights Commission linked mining zones to rampant sexual exploitation and substance abuse. Yet recommendations gather dust while abuse continues.
Healthcare rarely reaches remote mining areas. Testing services are limited. Treatment access remains patchy. Many women only learn their status when they fall seriously ill.
Beyond HIV, women face pregnancy risks, sexual violence, and emotional trauma. Some abandon the mines but return because poverty leaves them no choice.
Government promises of formalising artisanal mining move slowly. Meanwhile, widows pay the price daily. Gold enriches a few while crushing the many.
Abimbo reflects a wider national failure. Kenya celebrates minerals but neglects miners, especially women. Economic desperation collides with patriarchal power.
Real change requires action, not speeches. Authorities must regulate mines, protect women, and prosecute abuse. Health services must expand to mining zones. Alternative livelihoods must reach widows beyond mining.
Until then, Sex in Siaya Gold Mines will remain a brutal reality. Gold will keep shining. Women will keep suffering. And silence will keep killing.












