Men accused of burning 'witches' alive in Tanzania
It is not rare in Tanzania for people accused of being witches
NAIROBI:
Thirty-two men appeared in court in Tanzania on Monday accused of burning five women alive on the belief that they were 'poisoners' or witches, a court official said.
The men, aged between 18 and 75 and including some local officials in the region of Uchama, 50 kilo metres southeast of Mount Kilimanjaro, are due on trial on September 4, said the official at the district court in Nzega.
'Churail in Hyderabad' has gone viral and left Faakhir 'bewitched'
"Today the prosecutor argued that the 32 men participated in the killing of the five women by beating them before burning them until death," on July 27, the source told AFP.
Some of the accused pleaded guilty and some not guilty at Monday's hearing, which was held to prepare for the start of the trial next month.
It is not rare in Tanzania for people accused of being witches to be killed. In this case those in the dock accused the five women of having 'poisoned' other people, the judicial source said, requesting anonymity because he was not authorised to speak on behalf of the court.
Thirty-two men appeared in court in Tanzania on Monday accused of burning five women alive on the belief that they were 'poisoners' or witches, a court official said.
The men, aged between 18 and 75 and including some local officials in the region of Uchama, 50 kilo metres southeast of Mount Kilimanjaro, are due on trial on September 4, said the official at the district court in Nzega.
'Churail in Hyderabad' has gone viral and left Faakhir 'bewitched'
"Today the prosecutor argued that the 32 men participated in the killing of the five women by beating them before burning them until death," on July 27, the source told AFP.
Some of the accused pleaded guilty and some not guilty at Monday's hearing, which was held to prepare for the start of the trial next month.
It is not rare in Tanzania for people accused of being witches to be killed. In this case those in the dock accused the five women of having 'poisoned' other people, the judicial source said, requesting anonymity because he was not authorised to speak on behalf of the court.