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Yaytseslav Trahov Kenya Videos, Russian Man Mtwapa, Nyali, Mombasa Videos

The Yaytseslav Trahov Kenya videos are back in the spotlight, with fresh leaks from his time along the coast sending shockwaves through social media and leaving many Kenyans furious all over again. Watch the below videos in Mtwapa and Mombasa.

It started quietly enough. A few weeks back, as the big Ghana drama unfolded, someone dug up old clips from the Russian guy’s earlier stops in Kenya. Suddenly, videos of him in Mtwapa, Nyali, Shanzu, Bamburi, and spots around Mombasa started flooding Telegram groups and X timelines.

Then more surfaced from Diani and even Nairobi. The pattern? The situation was strikingly similar to what occurred in Ghana. He’d spot a woman on the street, in a mall, or at a beachside spot, flash that easy smile, chat for a bit, and boom – most would end up heading back to his place the same evening.

People are saying he racked up hundreds during his coastal run. One clip shows him in Mtwapa, walking along the main road near the shops, approaching a group of ladies laughing outside a small eatery.

He picks one out, says something that makes her grin, and the next thing, they’re in a tuk-tuk together. The camera – hidden in those everyday sunglasses he always wore – catches it all, from the ride to the room. No cuts, no hiding. Just raw footage that now has everyone talking.

The timing couldn’t be worse for him. With Ghana still boiling over the same kind of recordings, these Kenya ones feel like proof it wasn’t a one-off. Locals along the coast remember the guy vaguely – tall, Russian accent, always filming “travel vlogs”.

Turns out the vlogs included a lot more than sunsets. In Bamburi, one video has him at a popular restaurant, buying drinks for a woman who works nearby. Ten minutes of small talk, and she’s agreeing to leave with him. The same in Shanzu, where he chats up someone near the beachfront hotels.

Kenyans online aren’t holding back. Posts with the clips have racked up thousands of views and comments like “This is why we can’t trust these obronis” and “Our sisters fell for the same trick twice.”

Some are angry at the women, calling it too easy. “He didn’t even try hard in Mombasa, and they still went,” one guy wrote on Facebook. But plenty push back, saying it’s not fair to blame them when money and the thrill of a foreigner play a part. Economic pressures at the coast, where tourism jobs come and go, get mentioned a lot in the debates.

One clip that’s getting extra attention shows him in Diani, near the famous beaches. He’s with a different woman each time – sometimes two in a day, according to timestamps. The sunglasses trick works perfectly in the bright sunlight; the tiny lens blends right in.

Tech-savvy folks online broke it down: Ray-Ban-style glasses with a built-in recorder, streaming straight to his phone. He edited some for his channels but kept the full versions for paid groups.

This isn’t his first video in Kenya. He hit Mombasa first, then moved down the coast to Mtwapa for a stretch before heading to Diani and later Nairobi. Videos from the capital show him trying the same moves at malls and markets there.

The success rate looked high, just like everywhere else. Now that Ghana’s mess has everyone digging, these older ones are getting millions of new eyes.

Reactions in Kenya mirror what’s happening next door. Calls for the authorities to investigate are growing. Privacy laws here are strict – secretly recording intimate stuff without consent can lead to big fines or worse.

So far, no official statement from police, but cybercrime units are probably watching. On the flip side, some Kenyans are laughing it off in memes. “The Russian guy turned the coast into his playground,” one popular post joked, with a clip of him waving at the camera.

Yaytseslav, whose full name is Vyacheslav Trahov, built his online following doing exactly this – pickup videos from different countries. His TikTok and YouTube pages had the Kenya stuff up for months before the backlash forced him to scrub most of it.

But copies are everywhere now. In one resurfaced interview clip, he laughs about how welcoming African women are to “exotic” guys like him. That hasn’t aged well.

The whole thing has sparked bigger talks about trust and strangers. Young women in Mombasa are sharing stories of similar approaches, warning friends to stay sharp.

Beach vendors say they’ve seen more caution lately, with groups sticking together when foreigners start chatting. It’s a wake-up call for the tourism spots, where quick connections happen all the time but rarely get filmed like this.

As more Kenya videos trickle out – some from as far back as last year – the story keeps evolving. Ghana kicked it off, but Kenya’s chapter adds weight, showing a guy who moved from country to country doing the same thing.

Whether he planned the virality or not, Yaytseslav Trahov’s name is now linked to these scandals across the region. The clips may get taken down eventually, but the conversations? Those are sticking around long after the views fade. For now, a unique energy permeates the coast, with everyone closely monitoring the arrival of the next tourist with a camera.

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