“Oh, kule kwa mafuta (oh, the place of cosmetics)?” poses a matatu tout before making a 180-degree turn to point at a multi-storey building yonder. Bystanders throw curious glances from the corners of their eyes, as if to confirm who the culprits seeking the infamous building are. Apparently, ‘mafuta’, once an innocent Swahili noun, now has a weird meaning.
In this lower section of the capital city, synonymous with crime and fake products, also thrive unregulated clinics that offer backstreet injections, gels, creams and pills for butt and hip enhancement, as well as skin bleaching. This practice has become increasingly popular with young women and a huge source of worry for medical experts.
We follow the tout’s directions, but hardly have we reached the first corner of the building when we see women, lined up as hairdressers do outside a hair extension shop. They whisper as we pass: “Mami mafuta, mafuta.” They are a bunch of illicit beauticians scrambling for customers.
What’s puzzling is that Kenyan authorities seem clueless on how these unlicensed products get into the country despite the many regulations associated with the importation of such goods.
We cannot test these products because they don’t fall within our mandate (and we) don’t have the capacity to break down the components even if we wanted to,”
Clearly, no one has tested these products for efficacy or danger, neither has anyone attempted to stop the sale of the products whose existence is an open secret.
Medical experts have warned that some of the ingredients found in such products have contributed to rising cases of infertility in the country, and may cause cancer.

The four, who can hardly complete a sentence in English, unanimously tell us pills will do.
“You are well-rounded already and your hormones appear to be high, so an injection wouldn’t be necessary. Just a little increment on the hips, and some bum-tightening and you’re good to go,” explains one of the women who identifies herself as Maggie.
They add that as much as injections have instantaneous results, their side effects are detrimental to fertility. That said, skinny girls who are determined to grow a figure eight overnight have no salvation in pills or creams. They have to get the jab.
At Sh1,000 or less, creams and gels are easier on the pocket but the women say those are a life-time commitment.
The manufacturers of Dr James capsules indicate theirs is a “supplement” with “natural ingredients” such as Kigelia africana (better known as sausage tree), Pueraria mirifica (a plant primarily found in Thailand), ginseng and curcuxan (turmeric), among “other herbs”.
“Do you want hips too, or just butts?” the lady asks us.
“Both,” we respond.
“If you want both, you can swallow one and insert another into your anus,” she explains, noting that it works best if we ingest one brand and use another as a suppository.
What are the side effects, we ask? Sleepiness, they say; use the drug at bedtime. And to crown it all, they give us a number to call if the body reacts or if we are dissatisfied.
Later on, we speak with Dr Mike Magoma, a senior pharmacist, who confirms that C-4 is used to alleviate allergy symptoms. “Its side effects include increase in appetite, so people take advantage of them to gain weight,” he explains.

Meanwhile, back at the shop, we ask the four women to introduce us to a lady they say is a professional nurse who offers injectable butt boosters. “Many of those who inject people in this River Road claim to be professionals yet they are not,” the women say, “But we can assure you, (this one we are recommending to you) is a real nurse.”
The “nurse” operates clandestinely and in constant fear of law enforcers. If you walk into her “clinic” by yourself, she will swear upon her life that she doesn’t know what injections you’re talking about.
And to support the lie, her tiny stall sells a weird combination of items: five hair wigs, three bags, one bottle of Albedazole (usually for deworming) and tens of bleaching creams, among other insignificant things. These are her decoy.
My friend will act as her client. The nurse only allows us into her “clinic” because we were referred by Maggie, but she (nurse) refuses to divulge her name or the name of the drugs she intends to use on my friend, her client. She only says they are supplements.
“You know this trade is illegal. I can only show you the substance once you raise the Sh20,000 and make up your mind that you are doing this,” she says, bragging that some of the unnaturally large hips we see in the streets are the work of her hands.
To defend the price, she tells us how risky it is for her to import the illegal drugs – from ordering, and re-labelling the packages to throw off suspicion, to dodging government operatives at entry points and bribing their way through checkpoints. By the time the products rest in her hands, she has agonised and prayed they reach safely.
Ms Florence Rotich, a Kenyan working as a nurse in the United States, clarifies that there are no known supplements that can enhance one’s body in such a manner, and that only exercise and orthopedic surgeries by a professional doctor can bring the much-desired curves.
“These are marketing gimmicks. They don’t work,” she says. “There are no medications of any kind that are proven to work except surgical interventions. For instance, fat and cells can be removed from the belly and injected in the butt in what is called fat-grafting,” she explains.
Pop stars like Beyoncé, Kim Kardashian and Nicki Minaj, who flaunt what is deemed the perfect body shape, also seem to have inspired fans across the planet to seek to look the same.
For instance, silicone was traditionally supposed to be injected into pouch-like fillers and inserted surgically on each side of the bottoms, but some shoot it directly into the buttock tissues, causing leaks.
If silicone is accidentally injected into blood vessels, it can travel to the heart and lungs, causing death. The materials are also soft and don’t stay in a single location, leading to hard lumps called granulomas,” writes Healthline, an online platform where professionals share medically reviewed content.
Steroids, on the other hand, are common performance enhancers for athletes and bodybuilders because they are anabolic, meaning they increase bone and muscle mass.
A Healthline article by Dr Cynthia Cobb, a nurse and faculty member at Walden University, states that anabolic steroids help the body’s muscle cells produce more protein, which leads to increased muscle size and strength and, at the same time, allows the body to produce more Adenosine triphosphate (ATP), which energises the muscles to move. However, this only works if the athletes work out in addition to using the steroids.
It is this science that beauticians bank on to pump up the buttocks.
Dr Kireki Omanwa, a gynaecologist and obstetrician, says both steroids and silicone have a detrimental effect on human body functions, with infertility being the common result for the two substances. They also interfere with the proper functioning of the heart and other body organs.
“Steroids are not good. Even in medical situations, they are used in limited and specified areas, like on autoimmune conditions. Patients put on steroids have to be closely monitored as it could affect not only their reproductive health but also the general functioning of the body,” he warns.
There have been reports of rogue practitioners using fake or nonmedical-grade silicone, like silicone sealants (cement) used in household construction to seal bathroom tiles and floors.
Besides our attempts to get government assistance in testing the products to ascertain their ingredients, we try a number of private laboratories. The University of Nairobi lab, premised within Kenyatta National Hospital, comes highly recommended, so we pass by their lab. They tell us they do not have the capacity to test them, and refer us to the Kenya Medical Research Institute (Kemri).
At Kemri, the woman in charge of the microbiology laboratory keenly studies the writings on the packaging of the products and says the tests we need are for chemicals rather than for microorganism contaminants like bacteria. They usher us to the Kenya Public Health Research, which runs the national food safety and nutrition programme. “We only deal with food and mycotoxins. You might have to go to Kemri or NQCL,” the last lab offers.
Almost every lab we speak to tells us the same thing: there is a lack of capacity to break down our samples and analyse them. And so we leave it at that, not knowing what it is women are actually injecting or ingesting in their efforts to achieve the treasured “figure eight”, and also wondering exactly what kind of dangers they are exposing themselves to as a result.
