Albino body parts fuel rise of African witchcraft

A six-year-old boy has become the fourth albino murdered this year in the tiny east African country of Burundi by criminals seeking body parts for witchcraft.

Killing albinos to get lucky in love has been denounced as a
Killing albinos to get lucky in love has been denounced as a "stupid belief".
November 29, 2008 9:33 PM
By Jean Pierre Harerimana

KINYINYA - On an inky night earlier this month, a gun-wielding gang burst into Generose Nizigiyimana's mud hut in Burundi and dragged her sleeping six-year old albino boy into the bushes.

The widow and her other dark-skinned children fled into the night and heard a gunshot a few moments later. They found the dismembered body of the little boy lying behind their home when they returned.

"After shooting him, they cut him into pieces and took his tongue, arms and legs," Nizigiyimana told Reuters Television. "They went away with the body parts."

Burundian officials say the young boy was the fourth albino murdered this year in the tiny east African country by criminals seeking body parts for witchcraft.

Albinos lack pigment in their eyes, skin or hair. Their killers believe their arms, legs, hair, skin and genitals can be used in rites to bring clients success in love, life and business, according to police and albino support groups.

Campaigners say about 30 albinos have been
killed in neighbouring Tanzania in recent months.

Inside Burundi, near the border, 25 albinos have fled
village homes to the small town of Ruyigi in fear for
their lives. They are under police protection around the
clock.

"We can't even go outside during the day because
people could run after us and kill us," said Godefroid
Hakizimana, a 26-year-old albino farmer.

"People say we have a good market, that they can
make a lot of money with our body parts. Our lives
are in danger, that is why we are not ready to go
back to our villages."

He said Burundi's government had done little to
protect people with his condition -- who already have
a hard life living in region where there is plenty of
sunshine. Albinos are more susceptible to skin cancer
and sun burns.

Remy Nsengiyumva, a local administrator, said the
security forces were doing all they could, but that it
was clear why albinos in the area were being hunted.

"We have been told that there are people in Tanzania
using albino body parts to improve their mining and
fishing businesses," she said.

"I think the authorities in both our countries should sit
down together and take joint measures to eradicate
those killings."

Responding to the attacks in his country last month,
Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete denounced the
superstition surrounding albinos as a "stupid belief".

Reuters




People Behaving Badly

"There's nowt as queer as folk" said someone once in a suitably heavy rural British accent, no doubt with a wise shake of the head.
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