A woman who appears in widely shared recordings purportedly recorded by Baltazar Egonga has now spoken out, making her first public appearance in an interview with Television de Guinea Equatorial.
"I was shocked and upset," said Cristina, who said she had no idea the videos were still out there.
Cristina recalled that during their four-year relationship, she and Egonga had taped private moments, but he had promised to remove the video as soon as she saw it. "These videos that are currently in circulation were never intended for public consumption," she said. "It was intended to remove the few videos that were approved. I don't understand where they are coming from because I was present when we removed some of the photographs.
Cristina declared that she had filed an official complaint against Egonga and that she was determined to pursue legal action against him. She was visibly upset and made it clear that she felt deceived and wants to know how these recordings got on the internet without her permission. "Some things are shared in trust when you're in a relationship," she clarified. "I'm here to protect my right to privacy and to find out where these images came from."