Showing posts with label witchdoctors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label witchdoctors. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Supply and Demand

The research performed by the Mozambican Human Rights League showed that there was a link between Muti and business, in other words, trafficking body parts is part of the supply and demand business of Muti. These Muti practices that are prevalent in South Africa and Mozambique are a cultural belief that body parts will make the medicine more effective and that it can solve any problem, ranging from poverty to health issues. The research interviews showed that so-called witchdoctors have a firm belief themselves that human body parts are needed for strong Muti. Witchdoctors, usually through a third party, actively seek human body parts from live victims.

Also, from the results of this research it seemed that, when linking Mozambique and South Africa, the movement of body parts was always from Mozambique to South Africa, which means that Mozambique acts as a supplier and South Africa as a recipient. A woman working as a stall holder on the South African side of the border said “I saw a human head on top of some vegetables that were inside those big bags they use to carry goods […] It was the head of a child […] someone was trying to take the head from Mozambique to South Africa”. There was also the account of an “old lady” who was attacked and beheaded in Mozambique. The head was found in “Tsatsimbe River where they crushed the head to remove the brain” which was said to have been taken to South Africa. The interviewer heard 3 separate firsthand accounts of this incident, from a Policeman, a Community Member and a Neighbourhood Secretary. And, finally, an informant confirmed that the three cases that she reported were about body parts being moved from Mozambique to South Africa.

Monday, August 31, 2009

Why a blog about Trafficking Body Parts?


If you Google “Trafficking Body Parts”, the results that will most likely appear are about transplants or use of organs and body parts for medical purposes. However, a research conducted in 2008 by the Mozambican Human Rights League, has established that Trafficking Body Parts occurs regularly both within Mozambique and across the border to South Africa. The research found that none of the 72 accounts of issues relating to trafficking body parts could possibly have resulted in a transplant.

The report shows that so-called witchdoctors actively seek human body parts (usually through a third party) from live victims to be used in their medicine as it is a commonly held belief that traditional medicine, when made with body parts, is stronger and more powerful.

To read the full research project report (2008) in English click here.

Para ler o relatório completo do projecto de pesquisa (2008), carregue aqui.

On following posts, we will be giving more information about this issue.