Two
little kids, Mary Odiong and Ekong Asua ─ both eight years,
from the Okobo Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom State, have been tortured and
sent out of their homes on the allegation of witchcraft.
Odiong
who said a few weeks after her uncle died in Okopedi village of an ailment
suspected to be Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, some relatives of hers
said she was responsible for the AIDS and the subsequent death of the uncle.
She
said, “The people in my family called me and started asking me questions
whether I was a witch and why I killed my uncle. I told them that I did not
know anything about what they were talking about.
“They
started beating me. They hit me with cutlasses. They cut my buttocks with
knives.
“After
the beating became too much, I lost consciousness. Later, I woke up to find myself
in a bush. I have been living on the streets since last month without food and
shelter.”
The
second victim, Asua, from Oti Oro village, narrated that his parents died a few
weeks ago from strange ailments.
He
said after the death of his parents, his uncles began to accuse him of killing
them through wizardry.
He
said, “My uncles told me that they went somewhere to find out why my parents
died. They said they were told that I killed both of them through witchcraft.
They tied my hands and started beating me up with native sugarcane and asked me
to confess.
“When
I insisted that I knew nothing about the death of my parents, they took me to a
bush, where I met Odiong. Both of us have been living on the streets since
then,” he said.
The
Project Director, African Children Aid, Education and Development Foundation,
Mr. Nsidibe Orok, said it was unfortunate that children were still branded as
witches and wizards in a state that had put in place laws prohibiting the abuse
of children.
He
commended the state police command for responding to the plights of the hapless
children.
He
urged the police to investigate the matter with a view to bringing the culprits
to book as a deterrent to others.
He,
however, attributed the incident to ignorance and poverty. He advised religious
organisations to educate the people more on the need to care and love little
children.
The
state Police Public Relations Officer, Mr. Etim Dickson, said he had yet to be
briefed. He promised to get back to our correspondent once he had information
about the children.
But a
police extract from the Okobo Police Division, signed by CSP Abdulkhadir
Eljamal, and seen by our correspondent revealed that the children were picked
up and brought to the station by volunteers of African Children Aid, Education
and Development Foundation.
The
children are currently receiving treatment at the University of Uyo Teaching
Hospital.
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