Accused witch, Ashetu Chonfo says there are around 5 camps across northern Ghana
Current news reveal that that the British High Commissioner for Ghana appealed to the government
to close camps that house so-called witches and for the inhabitants to
be reintegrated into society.
News has it that in a meeting with Ghanaian authorities Jon Benjamin urged the
government to dispel the myth that witches exist and move potentially
thousands of women and children back to their villages.
'Personally, I believe in the 21st Century, it's time to say
there is no such thing as a witch and to decry the practice of using
such a term to dehumanise vulnerable women,' Benjamin said stressing his views were his and not of the British government.
During the address Benjamin, who has served in the African nation
since 2014, claimed that squalid shanty towns around Kuko, Northern
Ghana were holding around 800 'witches' and 500 children.
The accused 'witches' live in mud huts and have no access to basic sanitation and health facilities
He also said at the August meeting that keeping women and minors in such settlements is a violation of human rights.
One of the camps was closed down in 2014 with the help of British
charity, Action Aid, according to the Express, however plans to close
down other villages were quashed due to villagers, who still fear the
witchcraft, and authorities which worry that women sent back to their
communities will suffer violence or even death.
Despite agreeing with the authorities safety fear Benjamin remained an advocate for outlawing the camps.
'The point is that there are no such things as witches. Some
people maintain that the women in these camps are at least in a safe
space and not mistreated there as they might be in their home villages,
and they may have a point,' the former UK Ambassador for Chile said.
9 months pregnant Merci Gigire in a camp in Gambaga, Northern Ghana
'But if people weren't arbitrarily labelled witches and
discriminated against, occasionally violently, on that basis in the
first place, then you wouldn't need the camps at all.'
The camp's cut adrift inhabitants live in mud huts and have no
access to basic sanitation and health facilities. Some women have also
been kept in the ghetto style villages for decades says accused sorcerer
Sano Kojo.
Kojo, 70, has been living in a camp since 1981 when she was accused
of witchcraft by allegedly pressing on her cousin's chest until he
died, reported the Express. 'People don't care about alleged witches,' she says. 'Once you are here you are forgotten.'
Asana was accused of being a witch by her ex-husband who poured melted plastic over her
Another camp inhabitant, Asana, was sent to a camp after her
ex-husband poured melted plastic over her, when five months pregnant,
who tracked her down after he had a dream that she was a witch.
Action Aid Ghana is still pressing for the closure of the remaning five camps and for 'the reintegration of more than 400 accused women back into their respective communities.'
'Since 2010, we have reintegrated more than 254 women into
their communities and we are working hard with communities against
sending more women to the camps,' said Country Director Sumaila Abdul-Rahmen.
'The belief in witchcraft is deeply rooted in traditional
cosmology. It requires sensitisation and education to discourage
accusations.'
Culled from: Dailymail UK
No comments :
Post a Comment
Disclaimer: All the comments on this blog are the personal opinions of those who have comment it (commentators)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Advertise with us: E-mail: enyinnayaemma@gmail.com
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.