Tanzanian police have arrested a 44-year-old
man accused of trying to sell his albino niece to undercover security officials
posing as witch doctors as part of a nationwide crackdown on the illegal trade
in albino body parts used in black magic. A police
spokesman from Tanzania's western Tabora region said Margareth Khamis, 6, was
abducted a couple of nights ago from Kona Nne Village in Nzega district where
she lives with her albino mother, Joyce Mwandu, and three siblings.
Mwandu, a
widow, said a gang with their faces covered broke into her house overnight,
snatched her daughter, and ran off into the bush, triggering a manhunt by
fellow villagers. Juma
Bwire, the Acting Tabora Regional Police Commander, said a sting operation was
set up after a tip-off to police about a man looking for a buyer willing to
purchase the girl at an undisclosed price.
Witch
doctors will pay as much as $75,000 for a full set of albino body parts,
according to a Red Cross report. "After
we had received the information, our officers immediately put our trap and were
able to arrest the man red-handed," Bwire told the Thomson Reuters
Foundation. He said
the girl was rescued unharmed and has now been reunited with her family.
The
investigations are continuing and the suspect will appear in court on
completion of the investigations, Bwire said.
Tanzania
imposed a ban on witchcraft earlier this year to try to stop the trade in
albino body parts used in spells and charms that claim to bring luck, wealth
and love. The
United Nations has warned of a marked increase in attacks in Tanzania and other
countries in east Africa including Malawi and Burundi. Tanzania's
government warned last month that politicians could be behind the rising wave
of attacks on albinos as they jostle to widen their chances of winning in Oct.
25 elections.
At least
75 albinos, who lack pigment in their skin, hair and eyes, including children,
have been killed in Tanzania since 2000, according to U.N. figures, while many have been hacked
to death.
Albinism
is a congenital disorder which affects about one in 20,000 people worldwide,
according to medical authorities. It is, however, more common in sub-Saharan
Africa, affecting an estimated one Tanzanian in 1,400.
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