The Parliament of Ghana on Friday passed a bill to protect people accused of witchcraft, making it a crime to abuse them or send them away from communities.
Parliament of Ghana passed the Anti-witchcraft Bill to deter accusers from continuing with the usual labeling, accusing, manhandling and any form of act that infringes on the right of people.
The new law sponsored by Francis Xavier Sosu, was suggested after a 90-year-old woman was lynched in Kafaba in the East Gonja Municipality of the Savannah Region in July 2020, drawing condemnation from local and international rights groups.
While it is not uncommon for people to be accused of witchcraft in sub-Saharan Africa, particularly in rural communities, the woman’s death caused a public outcry because of the brutal way she was beaten and killed.
The new bill will also order the dismantling of makeshift camps where people shunned by their communities take refuge.
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Around 500 people, mainly elderly women and children, live in five such camps in the north of the country, according to Amnesty International.
“The law will provide a legal framework to prosecute offenders… and give confidence to victims… to reintegrate into their communities and unite with their families,” Kwame Anyimadu-Antwi, the Chairman of the Committee on Constitutional, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs, said on the floor of Parliament.
Credit: Reuters