Fund
to fight 'witchcraft' abuse
By
Angus Crawford
Home Affairs, BBC News
Two
charities are donating £450,000 to help African children in the UK who are
accused of witchcraft and abused.
The
BBC has learned the City Parochial Foundation and the Trust for London are giving
the money to help improve child protection and a family support centre.
The
practice of accusing children of being possessed and then carrying out often violent
exorcisms has followed some migrant communities to the UK.
Last
year, a government-funded report identified 38 such cases of abuse.
Major
faiths
In
Democratic Republic of Congo and surrounding countries, thousands of unregulated
churches have been set up mixing traditional beliefs and extreme revivalist Christianity.
In
recent years the practice of accusing children of being possessed and then carrying
out often violent exorcisms has become commonplace.
In
Kinshasa, the capital of DRC, thousands of children live on the streets after
being thrown out of their homes following claims of "Kindoki" or "Ndoki",
which means witchcraft.
Government-funded
research in the UK has shown that the practice has also followed some migrant
communities.
Possession
claims
In
June 2005 after a trial at the Old Bailey three people were sent to prison for
abusing a child they claimed was possessed by evil spirits.
The
child, who cannot be named, had been stabbed, beaten and had chilli peppers rubbed
in her eyes.
Five
years earlier eight-year-old Victoria Climbie was tortured to death - her killers
attacked her in part because they believed her to be possessed.
When
she died she had 128 individual injuries.
Last
year, the report funded by the Department for Education and Skills, said it was
not possible to give an accurate picture of the extent of the problem.
But
it concluded belief in spirit possession was common to all the major faiths.
Cases
were identified in different racial and religious groups.
Project
funding
The
BBC has learned that two London-based charitable trusts are now so concerned about
the problem they are to give £450,000 to four groups working to combat the
problem.
The
City Parochial Foundation and the Trust for London are giving the money to AFRUCA
(Africans Unite against Child Abuse), the UK Congolese Safeguarding Action Group,
The Churches Child Protection Advisory Service and The Victoria Climbie Foundation.
The
move came after African community groups approached the charities requesting help
to fund grass roots projects.
The
money should help pay for more education, training and research. It will fund
a support centre for families from the DRC and neighbouring countries.
"The
initiative... will enable them to contribute to the safety, quality of life and
well being of children and to promote children's rights," according to Bharat
Mehta who is chief executive of City Parochial Foundation and the Trust for London.
The
charities say they are helping these groups as part of their Safeguarding Children's
Rights initiative.
But
they point out that though the money is to help African children, child abuse
linked to a belief in possession occurs in a range of different faith groups based
in the UK.