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(Video) Luo Lady Maureen Manasseh Video Leaks Trending

Maureen Manasseh leaks videos and photos on Facebook, and now they are trending on Telegram. The Kenyan woman from the Luo community has decided to post adult photos and videos on Facebook to grow her following. The 28-year-old from Kisumu did it on purpose. Her page has gained thousands of followers in recent weeks. Posts show her in revealing outfits or explicit poses. She adds captions about body positivity and freedom.

Manasseh started the account in late 2025. At first, it had regular photos and daily updates. Views were low. Then she shifted to adult content. Likes and shares jumped fast.

One video from January 15 got over 50,000 views in days. She poses in lingerie or less, dancing to popular songs. Comments flood in. Some praise her confidence. Others ask for more. A few criticise it as wrong for the platform.

Manasseh claims the posts help women feel free. She gets messages from fans saying they feel inspired.

Facebook rules ban nudity and sexual content. But enforcement varies. Many pages like hers stay up for months. Manasseh uses careful angles to avoid full exposure. She tags posts with warnings. Still, reports come in.

Manasseh works as a salon owner in Kisumu. She has two children. Family knows about the page but stays quiet. Friends say she started it for quick money. Online work pays better than local jobs. Adult content draws fast attention in Kenya. Influencers use it to sell products or gain sponsors.

Reactions mix across the country. In Luo areas, some support her as bold. Others say it shames the community. Religious groups call it immoral. Pastors preached against such posts last Sunday. Youth online defend her choice. “It’s her body, her page,” one comment read. Debates fill comment sections.

Posting adult content is not illegal if consensual and private. But if minors see it, issues arise. Facebook age limits help, but kids find ways.

This trend grows in Kenya. Women post bold content for likes and cash. Some move to OnlyFans for direct pay. Manasseh stays on Facebook for local reach. She plans live sales of clothes and beauty items. The adult posts draw the crowd first.

Her following hit 20,000 this week. Shares come from Nairobi, Mombasa and the diaspora. Kenyans abroad send dollars. She thanks them in posts. “You unite us,” she writes.

Critics worry about the example for girls. Schools teach online safety. This case shows risks and rewards. Manasseh says hate does not stop her. She feels empowered.

No bans yet. The page stays active. New posts come daily. Followers watch for updates. Manasseh’s story shows changing online culture in Kenya. Social media offers chances but brings judgement. She chooses her path. Others watch and comment.

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