Nigerian Man Who Claimed To Be A Victim Of Witchcraft In His Village Loses Bid To Stay In Australia

A Nigerian man named in court as “Wzavl” who told authorities he had been a victim of witchcraft in his village of Abia State, on Tuesday, April 5, lost his bid to stay in Australia. Although the Migration Review Tribunal accepted that witchcraft takes place in Nigeria and that such practices had “the potential to physically harm victims”, however, the he tribunal did not accept the man was likely to suffer at the hands of witchcraft practitioners if he was returned, because he would live in a city about 95 kilometres from the village in which he had claimed to have  been the victim of witchcraft.

After “Wzavl” appealed the tribunal’s decision to deny him a protection visa, and failed in a separate
bid to overturn that decision, the Federal Court of Australia considered his case last

On Tuesday, Justice Kathleen Farrell handed down her decision to dismiss Wzavl’s plea for the tribunal’s ruling to be overturned. Farrell said Wzavl had told authorities his father had been tortured to death in 2009 after opposing witchcraft in the family’s village.

Justice Farrell said Wzavl told the tribunal that “in 2001, as a result of the applicant [Wzavl] asking questions about his father’s death, the applicant was also attacked by people in the village. As to the nature of the attack, the applicant said that he was made to go crazy with charms and left running naked in the street.”

He had also claimed to have had acid poured over his front and back, and claimed that if he were returned he could be subjected to sectarian violence from Muslims and be targeted by gangsters who would see him as a “rich man” after returning from Australia.

In the end, the Migration Review Tribunal (which last year became part of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal) accepted that witchcraft could harm people in Nigeria.

Justice Farrell found: “In relation to the applicant’s claims to fear harm arising from his father’s death and the use of witchcraft, the tribunal accepted that witchcraft takes place in Nigeria and has the potential to physically harm victims; it accepted that the applicant’s father was killed in 1990 and that the applicant had been subjected to harm by people from his village in 2001.”

Before arriving in Australia in 2011, Wzavl had moved from his village, where he feared reprisals from witchcraft practitioners, to the southern city of Aba, about 95 kilometres way. He later moved to Malaysia.

“The tribunal found that were he to return to Nigeria he would not return to his village and would instead return to Aba, being the place where he had resided for eight years prior to his departure to Malaysia,” Justice Farrell said.

The tribunal also ruled there was no more than a remote chance of him being targeted by gangsters or as a Christian at the hands of Muslims.

Justice Farrell rejected Wzavl’s bid for an appeal of the decision, and ordered him to pay costs to Immigration Minister Peter Dutton. It is expected Wzavl will soon be deported.

Source: The Sydney Morning Herald

Indian Woman Beheaded For Witchcraft, As Police Arrest Seven Suspects

A 63-year-old Indian woman, Purni Orang has been accused of practising witchcraft and beheaded.. She was stripped naked and later beheaded by villagers in the state of Assam, according to police authorities. Seven people, including two women, have been arrested over her killing.

Police in Assam say nearly 90 people, mostly women, have been beheaded, burnt alive or stabbed to death after such accusations in the last six years.

“Branding women as witches is particularly prevalent among tribal communities and tea plantation workers in the state. People in a village in Sonitpur district were falling sick, and some of them blamed Purni Orang for their condition. After that they branded her a witch and killed her, Mr Hussain, a police official said in anger.

In October, an Indian athlete Debjani Bora was also severely beaten after being branded a witch in Assam. Experts however say superstitious beliefs are behind some of these attacks, but there are occasions when people, especially widows are targeted for their land and property.

ISIS Beheads Two Women In Syria For Witchcraft

Islamic State beheaded two women over the weekend accused of witchcraft and working with elves in eastern Syria
The 2 women have become the first to be beheaded by Isis after being accused of witchcraft, sorcery and working with elves by the Islamic extremist group, according to reports emerging from eastern Syria.
The executions, for a supposed breach of sharia law, were carried out on Sunday and Monday respectively, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group based in Britain, said.
In separate executions, both women were put to death alongside their husbands in Deir ez-Zour province – the first in Deir ez-Zour city on Sunday, the second in Mayadin on Monday after being accused of using un-Islamic medicine by the extremist group.

The group says that this would be the first time the self-styled caliphate has killed women in this way.

Previous executions of women have involved stoning or firing squads, mostly for adultery.

The SOHR said this week in an audit of the year since the declaration of the ‘caliphate’ that Isis had executed 3,000 people in the past 12 months, 1,800 of them civilians, 86 of them women and 74 of them children.

Source: Daily Surge