Categories: News

Gender Minister Backs Down On Closing Witch Camps; Wants To Maintain Them

The Minister of Gender, Child and Social Protection, Mrs Cynthia Morrison has stated the ministry has reconsidered its stance on closing down witch camps, noting that it serves as a safe haven for people, mostly old women who are alleged to be witches.

Speaking on Class FM’s Executive Breakfast Show, Mrs Morrison disclosed that the camps will only be renamed and renovated as the alleged witches there refuse to go back home.

Shes said, “the brutalities don’t happen in the camp, they happen in the communities, the people run to the camps for shelter. I asked them: ‘Are you ready to go back home?’ They are like: ‘No, we don’t want to go home.’”

“You need to know the history of all these things. They believe in the witches; somebody dreams and sees somebody in the dream and the next is that the chief will call on him/her, interrogate and they will do some rituals…once somebody says they saw you in their dreams and you can’t defend yourself, you are banned from the community and you go through this where they beat and torture you and all that, and, so, people who are smart, once they hear of that, they run away.

“Some run away for days before they themselves run to the camps. It is not somebody who takes them, some of them, too, their family members take them. Sometimes, the chiefs send them there because they believe when they get there, they will do some incantations to get the witchcraft powers out of them and they live there as a safe haven.”

Ms Morrison continued: “It is not enough to say: ‘I’m closing the camps’. Sitting in Accra, I was like: ‘We’ll close down the camps but the people themselves say if you close down, we ‘ll not go [home]’. And some of them, the camp is such that they live within the community, it is not an isolated camp…they live within the community, they go to the market, they farm for people just like any other person farms for people in that community and, so, it will be a difficult thing [to do]”

“The witch camps look like a safe haven for them, so, we are looking at getting them a better home, removing that name ‘witch camp’, looking at how to keep these women and men safe because they are telling us ‘we are not going to go back to our homes.”

“How do we get this resolved? It’s education. The chief will tell you: ‘If you don’t believe in witches, we do believe they are there and we can’t live with them, so, they have to go,” the Minister stated.

Source: GhanaFeed.com

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