personaguy
All Star
These people are fukking evil!
Inside 'paedo paradise' The Gambia where Brit sex beasts are buying African children and toddlers to rape
Inside ‘paedo paradise’ The Gambia where sex beasts are buying African children and toddlers to rape
INVESTIGATION
Huge numbers of predators are taking advantage of lax laws in the poverty stricken African country to embark on sick child abuse holidays where they openly target little boys and girls.
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A tourist wades into the sea with a small African child in The Gambia - where child sex abuse is rifeCredit: My Story Media
12
A man with a British accent holds a scared toddler in his arms
Sun Online saw first hand how poor Gambian children can be vulnerable to British paedos when we visited the beach resorts that dot Kololi on the country’s picturesque Atlantic coastline.
Our reporter was constantly shocked by the number of unaccompanied African minors he saw being cared for by middle-aged, Western men who did not appear to be their biological fathers.
The encounters witnessed included a girl aged between six and eight having lunch with a balding, white haired man in a restaurant filled with similarly aged tourists.
The same day we saw a stoutly built man in his 50s or 60s wading into the ocean gripping the hand of a tiny African child in white swimming shorts.
Inside 'paedo paradise' The Gambia where Brit sex beasts are buying African children and toddlers to rape
Inside ‘paedo paradise’ The Gambia where sex beasts are buying African children and toddlers to rape
INVESTIGATION
- Graeme Culliford
- The Gambia
- 16 Jan 2020, 10:59
- Updated: 17 Jan 2020, 15:31
Huge numbers of predators are taking advantage of lax laws in the poverty stricken African country to embark on sick child abuse holidays where they openly target little boys and girls.
12
A tourist wades into the sea with a small African child in The Gambia - where child sex abuse is rifeCredit: My Story Media
12
A man with a British accent holds a scared toddler in his arms
Sun Online saw first hand how poor Gambian children can be vulnerable to British paedos when we visited the beach resorts that dot Kololi on the country’s picturesque Atlantic coastline.
Our reporter was constantly shocked by the number of unaccompanied African minors he saw being cared for by middle-aged, Western men who did not appear to be their biological fathers.
The encounters witnessed included a girl aged between six and eight having lunch with a balding, white haired man in a restaurant filled with similarly aged tourists.
The same day we saw a stoutly built man in his 50s or 60s wading into the ocean gripping the hand of a tiny African child in white swimming shorts.