Activists say attackers have killed at least 75 albinos in the east African country since 2000 to use their limbs and other body parts as charms meant to guarantee success in love, life and business.
President Jakaya Kikwete last week vowed to stamp out the practice he said brought shame on to the east African country, and albino campaigners called on authorities on Friday to execute people convicted of the murders.
“The witch-doctors were arrested in possession of different items, including potions and oil from an unknown source,” the police chief in the north-western town of Geita, Joseph Konyo, told reporters.
He did not say whether they had been charged, or caught with anything relating to albinos, whose condition means they lack pigment in their skin, eyes and hair.
Seventeen people convicted of the murders are currently on death row, including four sentenced to death on Thursday – but Tanzania has not carried out an execution for two decades.
“We want all those convicted of killing persons with albinism to be hanged without delay in order to send a strong message that these attacks will no longer be tolerated,” the chairman of the Tanzania Albinism Society, Ernest Kimaya, told Reuters.
“We made this appeal directly to the president during our meeting with him this week and he expressed his commitment to us that the government will expedite the process of carrying out executions of death row inmates convicted of such killings.”
Kimaya said the members feared the attacks, recently on the rise, would become even more frequent in the buildup to October elections, as some politicians turned to witch-doctors to try to increase their chance of winning.
“It is true that there is a link between elections and a rise in attacks on persons with albinism. It is something that we are aware of,” Kimaya said.
Similar beliefs exist in other African societies about albinos. But activists say attacks are particularly prevalent in Tanzania.
The home affairs minister, Mathias Chikawe, told Reuters the president had to give a written consent for an execution to be carried out.
credit: theguardian