London / Nairobi — British police have disrupted a vast international network believed to be behind the smuggling of tens of thousands of stolen mobile phones from the United Kingdom — many of which have ended up being resold as refurbished devices across African markets.
In what authorities described as the UK’s largest-ever operation against mobile phone theft, the Metropolitan Police announced that the gang may have trafficked up to 40,000 stolen smartphones to China and beyond over the past 12 months — accounting for as much as 40% of all phones stolen in London.

The criminal network allegedly operated a sophisticated pipeline: phones stolen on London streets were bulked together, shipped under false documentation to Asia, refurbished or repackaged, and later distributed through global gray markets — with many eventually resurfacing in African cities such as Nairobi, Lagos, and Accra, investigators say.
The investigation, code-named Operation Echosteep, began in December 2024 after customs officers discovered a suspicious shipment of about 1,000 iPhones at a warehouse near Heathrow Airport destined for Hong Kong. Nearly all were confirmed stolen.
That discovery led detectives to a sprawling criminal syndicate spanning the UK, North Africa, and East Asia.
Over the past month, police have arrested 46 suspects, seized thousands of devices, luxury watches, laptops, and over £40,000 in cash, officials said.
Among those arrested was a man who had travelled between London and Algeria more than 200 times in two years — a movement pattern police say fits the profile of couriers trafficking stolen electronics.
Two other suspects were arrested in northeast London after officers found more than 2,000 stolen phones linked to them, while several others were detained in a raid on a phone shop in Islington, where stolen goods were allegedly being prepared for export.

While police say much of the stolen stock was being sent to Asia, intelligence reports and trading patterns suggest that thousands of these devices eventually enter African markets, repackaged as refurbished smartphones.
At electronics markets in Nairobi’s Luthuli Avenue, Lagos’s Computer Village, and Accra’s Circle, vendors often sell imported iPhones and Samsung labelled as “UK-used” — a phrase that has become shorthand for second-hand or refurbished imports.
According to local traders interviewed by Prime Africa News, these phones are typically sourced from middlemen claiming to import surplus or recycled stock from the UK and Dubai. But behind the scenes, some of these devices originate from theft rings and smuggling routes now under investigation..
“Most of the phones we buy are shipped in bulk from Europe. We don’t always know their origin,” said one Nairobi trader, who requested anonymity. “They come in boxes marked as refurbished, but it’s impossible to tell which ones were stolen.”
Detective Inspector Mark Gavin, the senior investigator in the London operation, said the smugglers specifically targeted Apple products because of their high resale value.
Street thieves in the UK were reportedly paid up to £300 per iPhone, with some stolen handsets fetching as much as $5,000 (KSh 680,000) in overseas markets after being “reworked.”
“This was an international criminal network operating at an industrial scale,” Gavin said. “The phones are cleaned, data-wiped, and rebranded before being resold in foreign markets.”
London Mayor Sadiq Khan praised the police operation, saying robberies and thefts in the capital have dropped by 13% and 14% respectively this year. But he also urged global cooperation, warning that unless the mobile phone industry and destination markets act together, the trade in stolen devices will persist.
“Criminals are making millions by repurposing stolen phones and selling them abroad,” Khan said. “We need coordinated global action to shut down this trade.”
Experts warn that the influx of stolen or illegally imported phones poses not only ethical and legal risks but also data security threats to African consumers. Even after being reset, stolen devices can be blacklisted, rendering them unusable on certain networks, or contain hidden malware installed during the refurbishing process.
As London tightens its grip on organized phone theft, questions remain about how many of these stolen devices have already found their way into African hands — and whether authorities across the continent are prepared to trace and stop the flow.
