Penis theft panic hits city! (adult content)
KINSHASA
- Democratic Republic of Congo - April 23, 2008 - Police in Congo have arrested 13 suspected sorcerers
accused of using black magic to steal or shrink men's penises after a wave of
panic and attempted lynchings triggered by the alleged witchcraft.
Reports
of so-called penis snatching are not uncommon in West Africa, where belief in
traditional religions and witchcraft remains widespread, and where ritual
killings to obtain blood or body parts still occur.
Rumors
of penis theft began circulating last week in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of
Congo's sprawling capital of some 8 million inhabitants. They quickly dominated
radio call-in shows, with listeners advised to beware of fellow passengers in
communal taxis wearing gold rings.
Purported
victims, 14 of whom were also detained by police, claimed that sorcerers simply
touched them to make their genitals shrink or disappear, in what some residents
said was an attempt to extort cash with the promise of a cure.
"You
just have to be accused of that, and people come after you. We've had a number
of attempted lynchings. ... You see them covered in marks after being
beaten," Kinshasa's police chief, Jean-Dieudonne Oleko, told Reuters on
Tuesday.
Police
arrested the accused sorcerers and their victims in an effort to avoid the sort
of bloodshed seen in Ghana a decade ago, when 12 suspected penis snatchers were
beaten to death by angry mobs. The 27 men have since been released.
"I'm
tempted to say it's one huge joke," Oleko said.
"But
when you try to tell the victims that their penises are still there, they tell
you that it's become tiny or that they've become impotent. To that I tell them,
'How do you know if you haven't gone home and tried it'," he said.
Some
Kinshasa residents accuse a separatist sect from nearby Bas-Congo province of
being behind the witchcraft in revenge for a recent government crackdown on its
members.
"It's real. Just yesterday here, there was a man
who was a victim. We saw. What was left was tiny," said 29-year-old Alain
Kalala, who sells phone credits near a Kinshasa police station.