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India: Someone in the government is confused. More than 2500 women have been murdered after being accused of witchcraft in the last 16 years, and obviously something must be done. How about increasing the stigma these women face by making that which they are falsely accused of illegal? The decision to ban witchcraft, and do nothing about the murderers, comes on the back of a UN report into the problem:
The central government has moved to declare witchcraft illegal after the UN expressed concern at the number of murders ascribed to witch-hunting.
The UN also released figures of what is said were the victims of witchcraft and black magic around the world. The world body has named India along with countries in Africa, Asia and South America as a high-incidence zone for witchcraft related killings.
According to official figures, 2,556 women were branded as witches and killed in India between 1987 and 2003.
And one very bizarre statistic:
The figure was around 4,000 collectively for Britain, Scotland, Ireland, Wales and Australia between 1999 and 2003.
The BBC has very little to say about this apparent epidemic. The closest story they have relates to a male occultist murdered in Yorkshire, but that was not the killers' motive. The result for Australia was even less helpful:
There are no pages aboutwitchcraft murder australiafrom BBC News .
Perhaps there is a secret conspiracy of fundies going round bumping off occultists to please their God, and no-one knows about it.
Government may make witchcraft illegal - newkerala.com, 25th July 2004.
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Church and State
at 16:39. Last modified on September 28 2006 at 23:42.
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Comments
1: Posted by: Andrew Ian Dodge | July 26, 2004 1:19 PM
Witches (or those accused of it) are getting killed all over the world fairly frequently. However I think the UK and US have moved on from killing em'. I mean in both countries "real" witches are not exactly known for keeping it secret.
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