Malawi
orders police to shoot in a bid to protect albinos
LILONGWE (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Malawi
police are under orders to shoot anyone attacking albinos in the latest bid to
crack down on a rising wave of violence against albinos in East Africa whose
body parts are prized in black magic.
At least 15 people with albinism, mostly
children, have been killed, wounded, abducted or kidnapped in East Africa in
the past six months with a marked increase in Malawi, Tanzania and Burundi,
according to the United Nations.
U.N officials said at least six attacks on
albinos were reported in Malawi in the first 10 weeks of 2015 compared to four
incidents over the previous two years and gangs were roaming the southern
district of Machinga hunting for victims.
Tanzania has banned witchdoctors to try to
stop the trade in body parts used in spells and charms claiming to bring luck,
love and wealth, and Burundi is trying to safeguard albinos by accommodating
them in housing with police protection.
The latest order came from Malawi's Inspector
General of Police Lexen Kachama who instructed police to shoot any
"dangerous criminals" caught abducting albinos, according to
local media reports.
"Shoot every criminal who is violent when
caught red-handed abducting people with albinism," said Kachama, adding
that he was ordering police to use weapons in proportion to the crime.
"We cannot just watch while our friends
with albinism are being killed like animals every day .. We do realize that
these people are ruthless, have no mercy and therefore they need to be treated
just like that."
A similar remark was made by Tanzania's Prime
Minister Mizengo Pinda in 2009 when he urged citizens to kill anyone on the
spot if they were found with the limbs or organs of albinos who lack pigment in
their skin, hair and eyes.
Albino rights group have called for greater
protection of albinos but said killing suspects was not going to deter
criminals offered large sums of money for securing body parts as they were
likely to still take the risk for the promised reward.
Witchdoctors will pay as much as $75,000 for a
full set of albino body parts, according to a Red Cross report.
Vicky Ntetema, executive director of Under The
Same Sun, a Canadian non-profit organization defending albino rights, said
campaigners wanted justice for those people kidnapped, mutilated and murdered.
"But we have to remember that all those
goons caught red-handed ... are small fish - agents and executors of the big
sharks out there," she said.
"Killing them on the spot is not going to
help us catch the inducers, those with money to hire these gangs who continue
to terrorize innocent people with albinism and their families."
Ntetema urged police in Tanzania, Malawi and
Burundi to quiz suspects to get information about the witchdoctors who use
albino body parts and their clients.
"We all need to unite and find the
culprits who are hiding behind the killers ... Why would people kill albinos if
they were not asked to get their organs by someone?" she said.
The plight of people with albinism has
worsened in East Africa in recent years, according to U.N. and police figures,
with concerns that an election in Tanzania this year will prompt more attacks
as politicians seek luck at the ballot box.
The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights
Said Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein last month urged African governments to combat
impunity for crimes against people with albinism.
Albinism is a congenital disorder which affects about one in
20,000 people worldwide, according to medical authorities. It is more common in
sub-Saharan Africa and affects about one Tanzanian in 1,400.
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