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Children laughed and took pictures as ‘witch’ was stripped, tortured, bound then burned alive for sorcery

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WARNING:  GRAPHIC CONTENT

Children took pictures and laughed while a  young mother was tossed on to a pyre of tyres and burned alive, after being  accused of killing a neighbour’s six-year-old son with sorcery.

Kepari Leniata, 20, ‘confessed’ after she was  dragged from her hut, stripped naked and tortured with white-hot iron rods.

She was then dragged to a local rubbish dump,  doused in petrol and, with hands and feet bound, thrown on a fire of burning  tyres. As the mother-of-two screamed in agony, more petrol-soaked tyres were  thrown on top of her.

She was torched by villagers who claimed she killed a six-year-old boy through sorce

She was torched by villagers who claimed she killed a  six-year-old boy through sorcery, with police outnumbered by onlookers and  unable to intervene

The horrendous scene took place in  in the village of  Paiala, in the  highlands of Papua New Guinea where many  believe that witchcraft exists and  sorcery is used to kill enemies.

The head bishop of a Lutheran Church located  in the district today condemned the killing.

‘Sorcery and sorcery-related killings are  growing and the government needs to  come up with a law to stop such practice,’  David Piso told The National  newspaper.

‘Many innocent and helpless people  have been  killed and tortured after being accused of witchcraft, but  taking a life is  against the teachings of the Bible and the laws of the  country,’ he  said.

The tragedy unfolded after Miss Leniata’s young neighbour fell sick on Tuesday  morning. He complained of pains in the stomach and chest and was taken  Mt  Hagen hospital where he died a few hours later.

 

Still alive: Sorcery and witchcraft are still practiced in remote villages in Papua New Guinea's highlands

Still alive: Sorcery and witchcraft are still practiced  in remote villages in Papua New Guinea’s highlands

papua

The boy who died had been complaining of pains in the  stomach and chest and had been taken to Mt Hagen hospital

Relatives of the boy were suspicious  that  witchcraft was involved in the death and learned that two women had gone into  hiding in the jungle.

After they were tracked down, the pair  admitted they practised sorcery but had nothing to do with the boy’s death. Miss  Leniata, they said, was the person  responsible.

The boy’s family went to her hut at 7am on  Wednesday, stripped her and dragged her away to torture and death.

Pictures of the horrific scene were soon  circulating online. The  Post Courier newspaper said the torture and brutal  murder of a mother of two ‘provided a photo opportunity for many of the  onlookers, including  school children, who crowded around and took photos of the  woman being  consumed alive by the fire.’

Police who rushed to the area were  turned  back by the angry crowd, but were able to drive away with one of the other women  while the second has fled.

Part of the culture: Sorcery and witchcraft is widely believed in Papua New Guinea, which brought in a Sorcery Act to protect against attacks on those accused of practising black magic (file picture)

Part of the culture: Sorcery and witchcraft is widely  believed in Papua New Guinea, which brought in a Sorcery Act to protect against  attacks on those accused of practising black magic (file picture)

Breaking the law: The criminalisation of sorcery has seen several cases of violent vigilante action against 'witches' and 'sorcerers'

Breaking the law: The criminalisation of sorcery has  seen several cases of violent vigilante action against ‘witches’ and ‘sorcerers’  in highland villages

PAPUA NEW GUINEA AND  SORCERY

Sorcery and witchcraft is widely believed in  Papua New Guinea and is commonly practiced in remote villages across the island  nation.

The cost of a witch doctor revealing a cause  of death or casting out an evil spirit is usually 1000 New Guinean kina (£303),  plus a pig and a bag of rice,

In 1971, whilst still a colony, the country  introduced a Sorcery Act to criminalise the practice.

However the law has recently seen a rise in  attacks on innocent people accused of black magic, such as that on Miss Leniata,  and convictions by ‘kangaroo courts’ made up of of local village  elders.

As a result the Papua New Guinean law reform  commission proposing to repeal the law.

Last July, 29 people were arrested accused of  black magic and cannibalism after allegedly murdering seven people in order to  eat their brains and use their genitals for sorcery rituals.

In 2009 a man was hacked to pieces by  machetes after a ‘kangaroo court’ convicted him of  sorcery.

Papua New Guinean police have launched a  murder  investigation and are reportedly preparing charges against those  responsible.

A firetruck which had been called to the  scene was chased away by the crowd.

Authorities and international diplomats have  spoken out against the torching of the young mother, leaves  behind two children, the youngest an eight-month-old girl.

The country’s Prime Minister Peter O’Neill  has sworn to bring the killers to justice, as he addressed the matter in a  statement today.

‘No one commits such a despicable act in the  society that all of us, including Kepari, belong to,’ he said.

‘Barbaric killings connected with alleged  sorcery. Violence against women because of this belief that sorcery kills. These  are becoming all too common in certain parts of the country.

‘It is reprehensible that women, the old and  the weak in our society should be targeted for alleged sorcery or wrongs that  they actually have nothing to do with.’

The U.S. embassy on the Papua New Guinea  issued a statement condemning the “’brutal murder’ calling it evidence of  ‘pervasive gender-based violence’.

’We add our voice to those of Papua New  Guinean religious and civil society leaders who have spoken out against the  brutality inflicted upon Ms Leniata,’ the embassy said.

‘There is no possible justification for this  sort of violence. We hope that appropriate resources are devoted to identifying,  prosecuting, and punishing those responsible for Ms Leniata’s  murder.’



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