Amber Alert Ticker

Help Make Helen Ukpabio Face Justice

Target: President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua, Inspector-General of Police Sir Mike Mbama Okiro
Sponsored by:

As concerned members of the Nigerian and International community, we have been watching in great horror the activities of Evangelist Helen Ukpabio for some time now.

After having noted the recent great damage done to Nigeria's reputation by this false prophet's un-Christian teachings, we now feel that we have no option but to call upon the Nigerian Federal Government, Inspector General of Police, Akwa Ibom State Government and Cross River State to act to prevent any further embarrassment being caused. We believe that the recent attacks of innocent NGO staff and children at the CRARN children's centre were orchastrated by Mrs Ukpabio in an attempt by her to deflect criticism of her and her church's role in the labeling of children as witches, an act which has led to the widepread abuse of child rights taking place in the South-South region. Such violent abuse and labelling of innocent children is clearly an abuse of the Child Rights Act (2004) and, as such, we therefore call for the following:

1/ Urgent in-depth investigations into the recent attack on the CRARN centre and the activities of Evangelist Mrs Helen Ukpabio and Liberty Foundation Gospel Ministries to take place for breaches of the recently enacted Child Rights Act, which makes it illegal for children to be labeled as witches.

2/ Closure of all churches found to be labeling children as witches through deliverance or other methods. 3/ Seizure of all assets and illegal wealth of all false prophets such as Helen Ukpabio and redistribution of such funds to rehabilitate the victims of child witch stigmatisation.

4/ Successful prosecution of all pastors and parents found to be labeling children as witches.

We do not wish for the world to continue to focus on Nigeria with negative press and we do appreciate that you continue to monitor the response to the child witch crisis in Nigeria. We wish to encourage you to do everything in your power to fight such perpetrators of evil and uphold the rights of Nigeria's children.

As concerned members of the Nigerian and International community, we have been watching in great horror the activities of Evangelist Helen Ukpabio for some time now. After having noted the recent great damage done to Nigeria's reputation by this false prophet's un-Christian teachings, we now feel that we have no option but to call upon the Nigerian Federal Government, Inspector General of Police, Akwa Ibom State Government and Cross River State to act to prevent any further embarrassment being caused. We believe that the recent attacks of innocent NGO staff and children at the CRARN children's centre were orchastrated by Mrs Ukpabio in an attempt by her to deflect criticism of her and her church's role in the labeling of children as witches, an act which has led to the widepread abuse of child rights taking place in the South-South region. Such violent abuse and labelling of innocent children is clearly an abuse of the Child Rights Act (2004) and, as such, we therefore call for the following:

1/ Urgent in-depth investigations into the recent attack on the CRARN centre and the activities of Evangelist Mrs Helen Ukpabio and Liberty Foundation Gospel Ministries to take place for breaches of the recently enacted Child Rights Act, which makes it illegal for children to be labeled as witches.

2/ Closure of all churches found to be labeling children as witches through deliverance or other methods. 3/ Seizure of all assets and illegal wealth of all false prophets such as Helen Ukpabio and redistribution of such funds to rehabilitate the victims of child witch stigmatisation.

4/ Successful prosecution of all pastors and parents found to be labeling children as witches.

We do not wish for the world to continue to focus on Nigeria with negative press and we do appreciate that you continue to monitor the response to the child witch crisis in Nigeria. We wish to encourage you to do everything in your power to fight such perpetrators of evil and uphold the rights of Nigeria's children.

signature goal: 10,000
Please take time to sign Help Make Helen Ukpabio Face Justice. This is in response to the recent campaign of terror that was inflicted upon the staff and children at the CRARN center in Eket, Nigeria and the legal cases that have been sponsored by Helen Ukpabio to make Stepping Stones Nigeria and CRARN face false charges of fraud and "threat to life".
Please do show your support and sign this petition. If you could also forward to any other contacts around the world that would be wonderful. Previous petitions have significantly helped us with our campaign to protect and promote the rights of so-called child witches in Nigeria.
Please do not be cynical about such petitions. We really can use them to affect positive change! More information about the recent campaign of terror at the CRARN center can be found at: http://www.crin.org/violence/search/closeup.asp?infoID=20503 Akwa Ibom State Government Response can be found at: http://www.ngrguardiannews.com/metro/article03//indexn3_html?pdate=130709&ptitle=Akpabio%20donates%20N10%20million%20to%20centre%20for%20stigmatized%20kids&cpdate=130709 Helen Ukpabio response can be found at: http://thenationonlineng.net/web/articles/11667/1/Assassins-are-after-me-Helen-Ukpabio-cries-out/Page1.html
With sincere thanks for all your ongoing support,

Who will save the children of Akwa Ibom?

Who will save the children of Akwa Ibom?
My Naija News - Sunday, 21 December 2008

Local Missing Children

Welcome To Children Of Nigeria's Blog.

I am outraged by the way the children are treated. Labeled as witches by Evangelical pastors to extort money from their parents. Starved, tortured, abandoned and even killed because their parents are afraid. Something needs to be done about this. This needs to stop! PLEASE CONSIDER SIGNING THE PETITIONS FOR THE CHILDREN.

Thank you for visiting.

Welcome!

Google Map

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Reflections on Children’s Day

May 27 of every year is the official date chosen by Nigerian government to celebrate Children’s Day. This is in keeping with the United Nations (UN) General Assembly’s resolution in 1954 that all countries institute a Universal Children’s Day to be observed as a day to dwell on issues and activities that promote the welfare of children globally.

It is also a day set aside to appraise the progress made in respect of the nation’s children with a view to addressing their problems. In 1989, the UN General Assembly adopted the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which covers in its 54 articles all the rights of children on healthcare, education, freedom from exploitation and the right to hold opinion, amongst others.

Though Nigeria is a signatory to all these conventions, most of these lofty goals are more often breached than observed.

Every year, Children’s Day is marked with great pomp and ceremony, often with less thought on those things that would enhance the promotion of children’s rights and well-being. At best, the event has been reduced to a mere ritual of ceremonies where government officials mouth slogans and intentions that are never fulfilled.

As Nigerian children mark this year’s event today, let us use the occasion to direct our attention to those practices– private and official– that militate against the realization of children’s rights in the country. Nigerian children are still subjected to physical and mental violence, sexual abuse, neglect and maltreatment while with parents or guardians.

Apart from child labour, many Nigerian children are victims of human trafficking. A recent study by the International Labour Organisation (ILO) showed that Nigeria lost about 4,000 children to traffickers. Thousands of them were recently labelled as witches in Akwa Ibom State, and exposed to demeaning and inhuman acts, including premature death.

Educationally, Nigerian children have a bleak future. Recent statistics indicate that about 45 percent of school age children are out of school in the country. Those lucky to be in school are put in shanties and non-conducive environments that pass as classrooms. Some of them still go to school without food and in tattered clothing. In these schools, both the quantity and quality of instruction are far below expected standard.

Right now, all available indices point to the fact that there is indeed a bleak future for Nigerian children. At birth, not many of them are lucky enough to survive the first few months due to the parlous health care system that engenders high level of infant mortality. Unfortunately, 25 percent of them die before they can reach five years of age from avoidable causes. In spite of availability of preventive measures against child-killer diseases, Nigeria is still one of the countries in sub-Saharan Africa with the greatest figure of child deaths.

Even children that survive this level face the problem of malnutrition and stunted growth. They live in an unfriendly environment with little hope of attaining their aspirations in life. In most families, children’s opinions do not count, as they are not tolerated. The female child suffers most deprivations due to inherent discrimination in the family in favour of the male child.

One noticeable area the government has not been forthcoming is the implementation of the Child Rights Act. Though the National Assembly passed the Act in 2003, only about 18 states out of the 36 in the federation have passed the Act into law after domesticating it to suit their peculiar needs and circumstances. Passing the Act is one thing, implementing the provisions of the Act is another. Non-implementation of the Act would amount to mortgaging the future of Nigerian children.

Beyond passing the Act, all the tiers of government must take more than a passing interest in the welfare of our children. As the leaders of tomorrow, Nigerian children deserve to be offered the best in terms of education, health, environment and other indices that impinge on their overall well being. Nigerian children should be well catered for and their opinions heard and respected on issues that affect them. The present deplorable state is unacceptable.

It calls for a drastic and fundamental change for the better. That is the only way the celebration of Children’s Day can be meaningful in the country.

The Sun News Online

WHO steps up polio war in Nigeria, others

ALTHOUGH Nigeria still has over half of the global number for new polio cases so far this year, according to the United Nations, the world body has stated that there is progress in the effort of the international community to reach and vaccinate more Nigerian children in the northern states of the country.

A UN statement based on a World Health Organisation (WHO) report issued over the weekend said that mass vaccination campaigns are reaching more children than ever in polio-prone states of northern Nigeria.

Nigeria is among the four countries, along with Afghanistan, India and Pakistan, where the disease is still endemic, but the UN agency is now praising state governors from northern Nigeria whose involvement in the immunisation campaigns is getting more. The UN Special Envoy, Ibrahim Gambari, was also dispatched to states in northern Nigeria a few years ago and he mobilised northern leaders and people to actively participate in the immunisation campaigns of UN agencies which had been met with resistance in some northern states even by political leaders at that time.

Specifically, WHO stated that Kano State recorded the most progress "where in ongoing tests this year, evaluators have found 12 per cent of children who had never been immunised, compared to 50 per cent in 2008."

A UN statement added that "the number of children in Nigeria who have never been immunised against the disease - which is contracted through contaminated food, water and faeces and mainly affects children under five - has decreased since last year to 8 per cent from 16 per cent."

According to WHO's latest figures," 243 people in Nigeria had been diagnosed with polio from the start of 2009 to 12 May, up from 167 confirmed cases during the same period in 2008. Nearly 800 people were infected with polio in Nigeria last year."

Altogether this year, 417 polio cases have been reported globally so far, according to the WHO.

Earlier this year in February, another UN agency, United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) announced that some 53 million children under the age of five, including every girl and boy in Nigeria, have been targeted by a mass polio immunisation campaign across West Africa.

Under that mass campaign, UNICEF said a door-to-door polio eradication drive is planned to sweep through eight countries: Benin, Burkina Faso, C�te d'Ivoire, Ghana, Mali, Niger, Togo, and Nigeria, aiming to reach every child even in the remotest of areas and employing 162,000 trained immunisers.

Indeed, a good number of the immunisers worked to stop last year's polio outbreak which hit northern Nigeria and spread to six countries in West Africa after the wild polio virus had already re-infected Niger in 2007, as well as Chad and Cameroun in Central Africa.

The total cost of the campaign was put at $29 million for the seven countries, with an additional $38 million for Nigeria, including the cost of the vaccine, operational costs, social mobilisation and surveillance.

The campaign had a working coalition of the health ministries of all the countries, as well as support from UNICEF, the World Health Organisation and Rotary International, among others, representing what is now known in the international community as an integral part of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative.

Polio is a highly infectious and incurable viral disease contracted through contaminated food, water and faeces. It mainly affects children under five. One in 200 infections leads to irreversible paralysis, usually in the legs, and among those paralysed, five to 10 per cent die when their respiratory muscles become immobilised.

The Guardian

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

NIGERIA: Bishop charged with killing ‘witch children’ after TV confession


CHILDREN TARGETTED: Over hundred kids may have been killed by crazed ‘bishop’






Torture and murder claims involving 110 kids made in Channel 4 documentary

A self-styled ‘bishop’ who confessed to allegedly killing 110 ‘witch’ children in a Channel 4 documentary last year, is to again face court on murder charges next month.

Sunday Okon Williams and four others will face a court on June 8, ThisDay newspaper reported.

They are facing torture and murder charges over claims they made in the Channel 4

documentary, Saving Africa’s Witch Children, which was broadcast on November 12, 2008.

In the documentary, Williams claimed he had the power to exorcise witchcraft spirits from children. He also claimed he allegedly killed 110 children in Akwa Ibom State while trying to exorcise witchcraft from them.

Williams, founder of a spiritual healing home at Ibaka, Mbo Local Government area, and the four others last appeared before an Oron High Court on May 14.

The other accused persons include Pastor Samuel Excellence, Udeme Okon William, Ezekiel Bassey Oforkudok and Akpe Alfred Akpe.

They have all pleaded not guilty, with newswire, Reuters, reporting that Williams has since recanted his statement, saying he only killed the "witchcraft spirit" in the children.

They were arrested by embarrassed Nigerian government officials shortly after the documentary was aired.

Presiding Judge, Justice Archibong Archibong, denied them bail so they will remain at Eket Prison until the next court date.

Reuters said rights campaigners have long lamented the damage done to children by fraudulent pastors or "witchdoctors" in some parts of Nigeria.

Many convince parents that their children are possessed and will bring misfortune such as divorce or disease, in order to extort money to perform exorcisms, Reuters said.

Gary Foxcroft, program director of Stepping Stones Nigeria, a nonprofit that helps alleged witch children in the region told CNN recently that states of Akwa Ibom and Cross River have about 15,000 children branded as witches. Most of them end up abandoned and abused on the streets, he added.

Voice Online

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Let God of justice arise in Niger Delta

As you read this, thousands of innocent persons, especially women, children and the aged have been massacred in Gbaramatu Kingdom of Delta State in the Nigeria's oil belt. About 20,000 persons are displaced and trapped in the creeks, mangrove swamps and bushes of Warri South West Local Government Area of Delta State in Nigeria.

The onslaught by the Joint Task Force on the orders of the Federal Government started on Wednesday, May 13, 2009 and has progressed from house to house to burning of persons and property in Okerenkoko and Oporoza communities. Other communities affected are Kokodiagbene, Kurutie and Kunukunuma, all Ijaw communities in Gbaramatu clan of Delta State.

This action by the federal government and its JTF is cruel, appalling, barbaric, inhuman and sinful. Gbaramatu may be the starting point, but if we all remain silent the whole region will be engulfed in the inferno. Deploying four helicopter gun ships, 24 gunboats and over 7,000 military men to communities in peace time and in the name of hunting out criminals is a declaration of war on peaceful communities of innocent and harmless citizens. The militants live in the camps not in the communities.

Why has the federal government decided to give the children of the Niger Delta stone instead of bread? ìWhy should the Gentiles say, so where is their Godî - Psalm 115:2; and Psalm 82:3 says, ìdefend the poor and the fatherless; do justice to the afflicted and needy; free them from the hand of the wicked.î We therefore urge Niger Deltans to call upon God to deliver them from the hand of the wicked. The endless war and killing of Christians in some parts of Nigeria is gradually being brought down to our domain. We must not allow this to continue.

We want to use this medium to call on the Christian community to intervene in the Niger Delta crisis to find a lasting solution to the nagging incidents of genocide that have recurred over the years in several communities such as the sacking of Umuechem in 1990 in Rivers State; invasion of Ogoni communities in the early 1990s and the subsequent killing of Ken Saro-Wiwa in 1995; the sacking of Iko community in Akwa Ibom State in 1997; the razing down of Odi, Opia and Ikenyan communities in 1999 in Bayelsa State; Odioma community in Bayelsa State, 2005; Agge community in Bayelsa State, 2008, and now Gbaramatu clan in Delta State, 2009.

It is time the churches at the national and international levels took decisive steps toward the resolution of the crisis to forestall further loss of lives and properties.
We are anguished, pained and shocked beyond description that a government that has vowed and pledged a total commitment to the rule of law could suddenly become so lawless to attack and destroy unarmed, oppressed, afflicted citizens of Gbaramatu kingdom, especially vulnerable populations, including women, children, the aged, and physically challenged among others. The Federal Government has rolled out ammunition and all its armoury against harmless women and children, bombing and killing them in their thousands, rendering them homeless and leaving them at the mercy of the rampaging genocidal Nigerian military.

As a matter of urgency, men of God and the churches in the Niger Delta region need to rise in support of the people to protect their common heritage by faith.

• Emem Okon, Annkio Briggs & Hilda Dokubo ,
Gender Coalition Against Genocide (GAG).

The Sun News On-line

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Child Witches: Accused in the Name of Jesus

This promises to be an interesting Nightline. In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, some evangelical pastors have been accusing some unruly children of witchcraft and holding exorcisms.

WARNING: This clip footage from Nightline is disturbing.

http://abcnews.go.com/video/playerIndex?id=7619753

Here's the release:

In a special edition of "Nightline," ABC News anchor Dan Harris documents a new and growing phenomenon in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where children are accused of witchcraft by Evangelical pastors and subjected to often abusive "exorcisms" held at churches throughout the Congolese capital। Harris, who covers faith issues for the network, and a team of producers recently traveled to the region to see first-hand how this new breed of Evangelical pastor profits from this activity, which regularly leads to children being banished from their homes by their own families. As Harris reports, decades of war and poverty in the region have contributed to a virtual epidemic of exorcisms, performed with the cooperation of the children's own parents. A preview of the story will air on "World News with Charles Gibson" on May 21st at 6:30pm ET.

A stepmother tells Mr। Harris that she believes her two stepsons, ages 6 and 8, are witches because they "have been stealing their step sister's blood to fly at night."

Harris visited several Evangelical churches in the capital city of Kinshasa to witness pastors denounce these helpless and traumatized children as witches in the name of God before large crowds। Some pastors are paid to perform abusive "deliverance ceremonies" or exorcisms that can involve starving, beating and sometimes killing the children. In one ceremony, a boy is held down as hot wax is poured on his stomach. The parents in this case and others seem to embrace the exorcism. As one man says about his accused daughter, "I believe she is a witch because the pastor told me," and explains that there can be no other reason for his money and health problems. According to Save the Children in 2005, approximately 2,000 churches performed "deliverance ceremonies" in Mbuji-Mayi and an even larger number operate in Kinshasa.

A Congolese social worker, Arnold Mushiete, who works with children accused of witchcraft tells Mr। Harris that even after the "exorcisms" have allegedly been performed, most of these children end up on the streets, with no hope of reuniting with their families. REEJER estimates that over 70% of Kinshasa's fifteen thousand plus street children were kicked out of their homes after being accused of witchcraft. Harris meets many homeless teenage girls forced into prostitution. Some leave their babies on the side of the road while they turn tricks.

Mr. Harris took the evidence he gathered to a government official in charge of a special commission to protect accused child witches. The official himself expressed his belief that children could in fact be witches, and went on to say that if a child has a "bulging tummy and big black eyes" he or she may be a witch.
This special edition of ABC News "Nightline"-- Child Witches: Accused in the Name of Jesus airs Thursday, May 21, 2009 at 11:35pm

StarNewsOnline

Abuse of child 'witches' on rise, aid group says

(CNN) -- Christian Eshiett was a rambunctious pre-teen who spent a lot of time cavorting with his friends in southern Nigeria. He would skip school and run away from home for days, frustrating his grandfather, who oversaw the boy's care.

Children branded as witches protest on February 26, 2009, in the southern Nigerian city of Eket.

Children branded as witches protest on February 26, 2009, in the southern Nigerian city of Eket.

"I beat him severely with canes until they broke, yet he never shed a tear," said Eshiett Nelson Eshiett, 76. "One day, I took a broom to hit him and he started crying. Then I knew he was possessed by demons. ... Nigerian witches are terrified of brooms."

From that day two years ago, Christian, now 14, was branded a witch. The abuse intensified.

"They would take my clothes off, tie me up and beat me," he told CNN in a telephone interview.

The teen is one of the so-called witch children in Eket, a city in oil-rich Akwa Ibom state of Nigeria.

They are blamed for causing illness, death and destruction, prompting some communities to put them through harrowing punishments to "cleanse" them of their supposed magical powers.

"Children accused of witchcraft are often incarcerated in churches for weeks on end and beaten, starved and tortured in order to extract a confession," said Gary Foxcroft, program director of Stepping Stones Nigeria, a nonprofit that helps alleged witch children in the region.

Many of those targeted have traits that make them stand out, including learning disabilities, stubbornness and ailments such as epilepsy, he added.

The issue of "child witches" is soaring in Nigeria and other parts of the world, Foxcroft said.

The states of Akwa Ibom and Cross River have about 15,000 children branded as witches, and most of them end up abandoned and abused on the streets, he said.

Christian ran away from home and wandered around for two years with other children similarly accused. He said they stole, begged for food and performed menial jobs to survive.

The plight of "child witches" is raising concern among aid organizations, including the United Nations.

"It is a growing issue worldwide, among not just African communities, but in countries such as Nepal as well," said Jeff Crisp, head of policy development and evaluation for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees. "We are trying to see whether it is a neglected protected issue."

Belief in witchcraft thrives worldwide. About 1,000 people accused of being witches in Gambia were locked in detention centers in March and forced to drink a dangerous hallucinogenic potion, human rights organization Amnesty International said.

In 2005, relatives of an 8-year-old Angolan girl living in England were convicted of torturing her for being a "witch," according to the Times Online.

Pastors have been accused of worsening the problem by claiming to have powers to recognize and exorcise "child witches," sometimes for a fee, aid workers said.

But some are true believers, such as one minister in Lagos, Nigeria. He pinpoints children affected by witchcraft for free, he said.

"Sometimes, we get a dream that shows us a certain person is suffering from witchcraft," said the Rev. Albert Aina, a senior pastor at Four Square Gospel Church. "Sometimes, you have a child who has inexplicable body marks because of struggling in the night. They are easy to identify, but why charge when you have been given a gift by God?" Aina said.

Once a child is branded a witch, the stigma can last forever.

Christian was reunited with his grandfather, a former theater instructor at a university in Nigeria. Eshiett said he let his son's child return home because he loves him and he advocates for youth education.

But, he added, he does not think Christian has been or can be freed from witchcraft.

"When you are possessed, you are possessed; no one can deliver you from Satan," Eshiett said, adding that his grandson is a witch because he still exhibits unruly behavior and does not take education seriously.

Aid organizations acknowledge that the belief is acceptable and popular in some communities.

"It is not the belief in witchcraft that we are concerned about," Foxcroft said. "We acknowledge people's right to hold this belief on the condition that this does not lead to child abuse."

Foxcroft, whose documentary, "Saving Africa's Witch Children," was broadcast last year, spoke to a U.N. panel on the issue in April.

The aid worker said he is planning a global conference in 2010 and public awareness campaigns, including addressing the issue in Nigerian movies. The nation's film industry, dubbed Nollywood, is a popular form of entertainment in African countries.

Government officials also have joined the fight.

Akwa Ibom recently added a clause into the Child Rights Act, saying that anyone found guilty of branding a child a witch would get up to 12 years in prison.

"This is groundbreaking, and Stepping Stones Nigeria applauds the Akwa Ibom state government for this," Foxcroft said.

But, he added, there is more work to be done, and other groups, especially churches, have to team up to resolve the problem.

"The role of the international Christian community in this cannot be underestimated," Foxcroft said. "Unfortunately, the fact remains that this belief system is being spread by so-called Christians."

CNN's attempts to reach Akwa Ibom state officials through phone calls and e-mails were unsuccessful। A Nigerian federal communications official declined to comment.

CNN.com

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Child Witch - Bishop, Four Others Arraigned

Uyo — Self-styled Bishop, Sunday Okon Williams, who allegedly killed 110 children in Akwa Ibom State, in an attempt to exorcise witchcraft from them, was yesterday arraigned before an Oron High Court, along with four others. They are facing torture and murder charges.

Williams, founder of a spiritual healing home at Ibaka, Mbo Local Government area, was arrested November last year, following a documentary: Saving Africa's Witch Children," broadcast by the United Kingdom (UK) Channel 4 station on November 12, 2008.

In the documentary, the accused, during an interview, allegedly admitted killing more than 110 children in Akwa Ibom State, as he claimed to possess the power to exorcise witchcraft spirits from children.

Embarrassed by the documentary, the state government, in conjunction with security operatives, moved swiftly to arrest and charged them to Court.

Although the accused persons pleaded not guilty when the charges were read out to them, the Presiding Judge, Justice Archibong Archibong, ordered that they be remanded at the Eket Prison.

The other accused persons include Pastor Samuel Excellence, Udeme Okon William, Ezekiel Bassey Oforkudok and Akpe Alfred Akpe.

Justice Archibong maintained that the accused could not be granted bail because of the serious nature of the case. He indicated that such application or order for bail should be made more formal before the court

In an interview, Commissioner for Information and Social Re-orientation, Mr Aniekan Umanah, said the appearance of the accused in court was a practical demonstration of the government's determination to safeguard rights of children of Akwa Ibom State, as enshrined in the Child Rights Act 2008.

The suit number HOR/3C/2009, State vs Bishop Sunday Okon William and Four others, was adjourned till June 8, 2009, for continuation of hearing.

AllAfrica

Thursday, May 7, 2009

The Hullabaloo about Child Witches

Following reports that children branded witches in Akwa Ibom were being maltreated, a couple of foreign TV stations ran a documentary which was allegedly named, styled and culled from a film made by a local foundation titled “End of the Wicked”. The body claims the documentary has brought woes to the organisation. Mary Ekah writes

She has been under the scrutiny and attacked of the world press lately. By no fault of hers, she has been tagged “Heartless Wicked Woman”, “False Prophetess”, “Extortionist”, the list is endless. It is no other person but the evangelist, filmmaker and president of Liberty Gospel Church based in Calabar, Mrs. Helen Ukpabio.
She claimed to have suffered for the faith which she proclaims as there have been a whole lot of derogatory statements against her pasted on the internet by people all over the world. It does not just end there. Ukpabio claimed she has suffered several physical attacks by people while on her missionary journey abroad all on the allegation that her movies encourage the stigmatisation and maltreatment of children labeled witches in Akwa Ibom State.
The hullabaloo against Liberty Church Gospel Church started late last year, when on November 12, 2008, following the reports that children branded witches by pastors in Akwa Ibom were maltreated, channel 04 of the UK ran a two-hour telecast/documentary on “dispatches” titled, “Saving the African Child Witch”.
The documentary was named, styled and curdled from popularly film made by the Incorporated Trustees of the Liberty Foundation Gospel Ministries and titled “End of the Wicked.” Ukpabio is shocked that “End of the Wicked”, which has been out since1999 and has been a source of deliverance to countless families, is posing a problem to some section of people even ten years after it was produced.
The story line of “End of the Wicked”, Ukpabio said, has nothing to do with children labeled witchcraft. The film, she stressed, simply says if a child is a glutton, he or she could be easily be initiated into witchcraft and the only way out for such child is deliverance through the Lord Jesus.
“There was no place in the film where children were branded witches rather, we saw greedy children initiated into witchcraft by other children who were witches in the school,” Ukpabio explained.
It was claimed in the TV documentary by UK broadcaster of Channel 4 that the views that she expresses has lead to a massive upsurge in children stigmatised and abandoned by their families in West Africa, particularly in Akwa Ibom State.
The documentary followed the activities of two charities, Child Rights and Rehabilitation Network (CRARN) and Stepping Stones Nigeria, a UK-based organisation that claim to look after the children who have been rejected by their parents for displaying what they believed to be signs of witchcraft.
“These scammers have so far collected over 200,000 British Pound Sterling from members of the public. The Akwa Ibom state government fell to these scammers by parting with twenty thousand pounds. The truth of the matter is that Liberty Foundation Gospel Ministries never produced the pirated film “End of the Wicked” shown on the said documentary.
“The authentic film made by the ministry and approved by the National Board for Video Censorship Board was radically different from the pirated film wherein our ministries was wickedly libeled thereof,” Ukpabio said.
“No where in the film of Helen Ukpabio showed where children were labeled as witches, tortured or where parents of these children were asked to pay some amount of money,” the organisation's lawyer said last week.
Instead, the lawyer said Ukpabio's 'End of the Wicked,' showed how children or adult who has been initiated into witchcraft cult could be delivered through the power of Christ. The message passed by the documentary, he stressed, is completely different from the original message intended by Helen Ukpabio's “End of the Wicked”.
Consequently, the church has complained to the regulatory agency in UK, OFCOM concerning, what the lawyer described as, “the unprofessional telecast,” which he said is against OFCOM broadcast code of UK.
“We have also complained to the Akwa Ibom State Government to close down CRARN for being a conduit for 419 and keeping custody of children contrary to the laws of Akwa Ibom State and the Child Right Act 2007”, he said further.
The lawyer also revealed that the church has also complained to EFCC to arrest and prosecute Gary Fox Croft of Stepping Stones Nigeria and Sam Ikpe-Itauman of CRARN for using CRARN and SSN to perpetuate 419. The organisation is also instituting legal action against channel 04, and the narrator of the documentary, Sophie Okowedo, for libel.
Ukpabio said “If you know what I know and have seen the suffering people go through every day when they come to me for counseling, you would have even done more films on witchcraft with the intent of exposing their activities.
“I believe witch craft is a minor problem which we can handle effectively compared to what happen on the streets of Europe where kids get involved in drugs, murder and all sorts.”
She is also surprised at the way the Akwa Ibom state government has reacted to such trick, and then quickly gave out money to the organisation.
“It is so easy for jobless people who are not renowned people in their countries to come over here and play over the intelligence of the government.
“They are using Nigerians to make money and also capitalise on our ignorance. They feel we are still Nigerians of the 60s and so they can still come in and trample on us,” the evangelist lamented.

THISDAY ONLINE

Religious Leaders Tasked On Stigmatisation

Religious leaders in Ikot Ekpene Local Government area of Akwa Ibom State have been admonished to ensure that the people of the area do not stigmatise or discriminate against aged parents or children on grounds of witchcraft as the state will not view the issue lightly.

The Governor of the state, Chief Godswill Akpabio, stated this at Ikot Ekpene at the just concluded orientation/seminar for church leaders and students.

Represented by the Commissioner for Commerce and Industries, Dr. Emem wills, Akpabio noted that, proliferation of churches and the witches/witchcraft pursuit syndrome is completely out of practice in today’s Christendom.

Speaking on the theme, "The Fear of God:, A Panacea For An Akwa Ibom Child and the Expectations of the 21st Century Church in the State, Wills noted with dismay how church leaders get themselves involved in deceit, spiritism, mysticism and other forms of sorcery to attract converts for financial gains.

Most of them he observed do not remember anymore to teach the young ones values, norms and etiquettes within the confines of their society.

He advised church leaders to retrace their steps and hold fast to their mandate of prayerfulness, reminding them that they are in the Lord's vineyard and that a great reward awaits those who will do their work diligently.

Leadership Nigeria

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Child sacrifice blamed on foreign-based witches

THE increased number of cases of human sacrifice is a result of a crackdown by the South African government against Ugandan witchdoctors, commonly referred to as Bafere, Police boss Maj. Gen. Kale Kayihura told Parliament yesterday.

Kayihura said the quack witchdoctors, who were forced to relocate to Uganda, masquerade as traditional herbalists with the purpose of extorting money out of Ugandans.

“Many of these traditional healers have done this business in South Africa. Now that South Africa is arresting them, they are trying to run away.”

He was appearing before the parliamentary select committee investigating the conduct of the Police during the arrest of MPs.

Kayihura said Ugandans with various social problems visit the conmen. These give them herbs after extorting money out of them. The witchdoctors then tell their victims that their problems require a human sacrifice.

“As a way of protecting himself, he tells his victim to look for a head or private parts of a virgin,” Kayihura explained.

He cited the recent incident in Ntunda village, Kiboga district, where a 12-year-old girl was sacrificed days after she was reported missing. Her private parts had been cut off before her body was dumped in a bush. He observed that there are over 60 traditional healers in Ntunda alone.

During the same meeting, Kayihura also proposed that the constitutional provision requiring suspects to be charged in court within 48 hours be reviewed. He said more time is needed for the Police to carry out investigations.

However, the MPs opposed the idea, saying it would increase cases of torture of suspects.
“If someone can be tortured in just a few hours of arrest, what if the 48 hours are reviewed,” the Kasese Woman MP, Winnie Kiiza, asked.

On the conduct of the Police during the arrest of Kampala MP Nabilah Ssempala last year, Kayihura told the committee that the current law does not provide for special ways of arresting an MP. This means that an MP is treated like any other ordinary person during arrest.

He also said he had instituted a committee to investigate claims that some female officers had been sexually harassed by their male counterparts.

Kayihura attributed the increase in cases of drug abuse to weak laws which he said need to be reviewed.

New Vision Online

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

I've been nominated for "The most Outstanding Online Advocate of Child's Right of the Year 2008" Award!

This is the email and letter Child's Right And Rehabilitation Network (CRARN) sent to me.

Dear Kelli,

I am sending you a letter from CRARN informing you of the Hero's Award to bestowed on you for you unparralled fight for the survival right and freedom of children all over the world.
It is gratifying to note that your online effort at saving the lives of the children around the globe has yeilded significant result. While congratulating you on this award, I will request you to see the attached for detail.

Once again, congratulation.

Thanks.
Sam Ikpe-Itauma
(President)

Child's Right And Rehabilitation Network (CRARN)
Hotline +2348026693099 Talk to the children direct call +2348086754666
Registered with the Corperate Affairs Commission (CAC), Abuja, Nigeria
Charity Number: CAC/IT/No 27195
CRARN: Rehabilitating and protecing a child.


Click on the letter to enlarge.
It's a great honor to be nominated for "The most Outstanding Online Advocate of Child's Right of the Year 2008" Award. Thank you so much Child's Right And Rehabilitation Network (CRARN) for nominating me I am truly honored.

Please sign these petitions if you haven't already, the children need us to be their voices and put an end to their torture caused by greedy fake profits:

Help the Child Witches of Nigeria - Support the Prevent Abandonment of Children Today(PACT) Campaign

Stop Liberty Foundation Gospel Ministries of Nigeria from labeling children as witches.

Stop The Labeling Of Children As Witches

If you have thank you so much for being a voice for the voiceless.

Tell Me Why-Declan Galbraith

Black Eyed Peas - Where Is the Love - Lyrics

News

Protect the African Girl Child

STOP Stealing our children for the Sex Industry!

The Children of Africa - Take the pledge!

News

Loading...

Niger Delta Social Services Agency,Missing Children

Children of Nigeria

Witch Children in Nigeria!

Children Learn What They Live (2005)

If a child lives with criticism, he learns to feel discouraged

If a child lives with hostility, he learns to feel angry

If a child lives with violence, he learns to feel afraid

If a child lives with dishonesty, he learns to feel suspicious

If a child lives with judgement, he learns to feel guilty

If a child lives with ridicule, he learns to feel ashamed

If a child lives with disorder, he learns to feel confused

If a child lives with disappointment, he learns to feel helpless

If a child lives with silence, he learns to feel lonely

BUT

If a child lives with protection, he learns to feel safe

If a child lives with honesty, he learns to feel trustful

If a child lives with peace, he learns to feel calm

If a child lives with sharing, he learns to feel thankful

If a child lives with understanding, he learns to feel encouraged

If a child lives with laughter, he learns to feel happy

If a child lives with creativity, he learns to feel inspired

If a child lives with choice, he learns to feel free

If a child lives with community, he learns to feel supported

If a child lives with accomplishment, he learns to feel confident

If a child lives with meaning, he learns to feel fulfilled

If a child lives with love, he learns to feel tender

by Duen Hsi Yen

Take the pledge to help save the children and the earth.

Recycle



Please join me in taking the pledge to recycle plastic an aluminum and donate the money to:

You can donate via the following :

BANK NAME : BANKERS TRUST COMPANY,NEW YORK
280,PARK
AVENUE,NEW YORK,
NY10017.
SWIFT NO : BKTRUS33
ACCOUNT NAME :OCEANIC BANK INTERNATIONAL (NIG)PLC
ACCOUNT NO : 04-177-479
BENEFICIARY :ACCOUNT NAME; CHILD'S RIGHT
AND
REHABILITATION NETWORK
:ACCOUNT NUMBER;0203003000289
:C/O OCEANIC BANK INTERNATIONAL (NIG) PLC
15,GRACE BILL
ROAD, EKET, AKWA IBOM STATE, NIGERIA.

Or you call +2348026693099


Please put your name, country and city in the comment area to sign the pledge.

Thank you!

My Dream

I dream that someday soon children will be free from abuse. I also dream that someday we will all live in peace.

My Playlist


Peace

Peace

Great Traffic Sites

Traffic Jamms

Vote On My Page

Rate Our Services

Traffic Swarm