Posts by whrin_admin

Malawi: Mental Illness is not Witchcraft

Doctors have dismissed beliefs that mental illness is associated with witchcraft as many believe in the country…

Associate Professor Mack Malewa said drug and substance abuse is the main cause of mental illness in the country. He said however that it is sad that a lot of people in the country still believe that mental conditions are caused by witchcraft.

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Nigeria: Akwa Ibom Govt. React To Story On Child Witches

Dear CKN,
It is unfortunate that the writer is ascribing the action of perhaps one person or a few persons to an entire state and hiding under that cover to launch an attack on the Governor of Akwa Ibom State, Chief Godswill Akpabio.
Or how else do I describe a report on the so-called child witch syndrome dove-tailing into such spurious remarks that the Governor will leave Akwa Ibom State poorer than hour met it. Haba!
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Middle East: Witch Hunters Seek Out Black Magic Doctors

Expats across the Middle East are increasingly accused of witchcraft and black magic.

Recently a woman was stopped in a car at a Qatar border crossing and accused of transporting magic stones and other witchcraft paraphernalia.

In Saudi Arabia, 85% of witchcraft cases heard by courts involve expats – with the highest number in Makkah and Madinah.

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Nigeria: Man held for killing woman accused of witchcraft

A man, Mohammed Seto Umar, 34 of Bode Fulani via Ilesha Baruba, Kwara State, who allegedly conspired with five others including two women, Zainab and Geto now at large matcheted a woman whom they accused to be witch to death has been remanded at the Federal Prison, Oke-Kura, Ilorin.

The accused was arraigned on a four-count charge of criminal conspiracy, defamation of character, causing grievous hurt and culpable homicide, contrary to Sections 97, 292, 247 and 221 of Penal Code Law.

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Nigeria: Resurgence of ritual killing

In the south-western part of Nigeria, the major topic which dominates discussions lately is the series of escapades of suspected ritualists. This followed the recent discovery of some dungeons in Ibadan and Abeokuta, two important state capital cities where human beings were abducted and allegedly killed for ritual purposes…

Saturday Newswatch investigation revealed that ritual killing is not a recent phenomenon, and indeed knows no geographical boundaries.

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Ghana: ActionAid condemns Ghana’s desire for foreign products

ActionAid Ghana (AAG), a non-governmental organization, has condemned Ghanaians for their incessant desire and taste for everything foreign, noting that such attitude kills local initiatives and makes the country poorer…

Madam Adams Lamnatu, Coordinator of Songtaba, a partner NGO working with AAG, said its work in the Nanumba area had contributed greatly to the reduction of forced marriages, teenage pregnancies, violence against women and poverty reduction due to its pro-poor policies.

She indicated that many awareness had been heightened on the alleged witches, and has resulted in the reintegration of more than 100 of them within two years, and expressed the hope that the numbers would drastically reduce at the witches’ camps.

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Fiji: Witchcraft claims case

Four men who allegedly killed a man because of claims that he practised witchcraft appeared at the High Court in Lautoka on Friday.

Rakesh Kumar, Vinod Segran, Mataiyasi Ului and Maikeli Loko appeared before Justice Sudharshan De Silva charged with the murder of Nadi carpenter Arun Vasudewan.

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Zimbabwe: Stranger than Fiction – ‘Witches ate my Baby’

The second wife of a Murehwa businessman has claimed that she gave birth after a full pregnancy but the baby vanished.

Winnett Guvheya (46), suspects witches snatched her newborn. When labour pains hit during the night, her husband, Exaverio Guvheya (64) raced to inform a local health professional. But when they returned his wife had already given birth and the baby was gone. A blood splattered bed was all that was left.

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USA: A Lot of Americans Think the Spirit World Exists

A new study shows that 57 percent of Hispanics believe in otherworldly beings—and the percentage is even higher among evangelical Protestants.

Spirits have more of a formal role in religious life. Possession and exorcism are part of Christianity, Hinduism, and Islam… Many Roman Catholics and Orthodox Christians pray for saints to intervene in their lives; the Vatican routinely reviews miracles claimed to be caused by the holy figures of the Church.

But what do most people actually believe about the spirit world? A new Pew study on Hispanic-American religious belief attempts to provide part of an answer to this question, with fascinating results: It shows that spirits are still pretty popular in modern life.

Read more and see the results here

Nigeria: Abuse of child ‘witches’ on rise, aid group says

Christian Eshiett was a rambunctious pre-teen who spent a lot of time cavorting with his friends in southern Nigeria. He would skip school and run away from home for days, frustrating his grandfather, who oversaw the boy’s care.

“I beat him severely with canes until they broke, yet he never shed a tear,” said Eshiett Nelson Eshiett, 76. “One day, I took a broom to hit him and he started crying. Then I knew he was possessed by demons. … Nigerian witches are terrified of brooms.”

From that day two years ago, Christian, now 14, was branded a witch. The abuse intensified.

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