Angola In
Angola, many orphaned children are accused of witchcraft and demonic possession by relatives in order to justify not providing for them. Various methods are employed: starvation, beating, unknown substances rubbed into their eyes or being chained or tied up. Many of those who are rejected by their family end up in orphanages and are shunned by the population.
The Gambia In
the Gambia, about 1,000 people accused of being witches were locked in government detention centers in March 2009. They were forced to drink an unknown
hallucinogenic potion, according to
Amnesty International. They were then forced to confess to witchcraft, with some being severely beaten.
Uganda Witchdoctors, who also identify as traditional healers, will consult the spirits for anyone who can pay their fee. The spirits will communicate via them the kind of sacrifice for appeasement that they want. Often these sacrifices are chickens or goats, but when such sacrifices fail to make the client prosper instantly, ‘the spirits' will demand human sacrifices. When a child is sacrificed, the witch doctor and his accomplices will generally undertake the whole process. Human rights activists opposing the practice have been threatened and some, such as humanist
Leo Igwe, mobbed and harassed by police. One source estimates 15,000 children in the Niger Delta alone have been forced on the streets by witchcraft accusations.
Sierra Leone In
Sierra Leone and neighbouring countries, the young survivors of the
ebola epidemic are often accused of witchcraft, losing parents to the disease and community support to superstition. According to a disputable empiric construction, sick infants tend to have better survival rates due to witch-hunts:
Congo In the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, it is estimated that there are 25,000 homeless children living on the streets of the capital city. Of these, 60% were expelled from their homes because of allegations of witchcraft. Accusations of witchcraft is the only justifiable reason for the refusal to house a family member, no matter how distant the relation. As a result, 50,000 children are kept in churches for exorcisms. The latter are believed to exert an evil influence upon others, so disabled infants have traditionally been disposed of without a proper burial. Reasons for being declared impure include birth out of wedlock, the birth of twins, the eruption of teeth in the upper jaw before the lower jaw, and chipping a tooth in childhood. ==Possible solutions==