A/HRC/7/10/Add.4
page 14
services until December 2005. The Bishop of Cabinda has received death threats, whilst
acts of vandalism have been committed in chapels and verbal insults have been directed
against priests during mass celebrations. The vehicle the Bishops of Huambo and
Ndalantando travelled in was stoned on 26 June 2005 when they visited Cabinda. When
the Archbishop of Angola travelled to Cabinda on 18 July, he was met at the airport by
protests which became violent. The violence continued as he attempted to hold mass but
was forced to leave. It was reported that in Cabinda town on 5 December 2006,
opponents to the Bishop attempted to prevent the holding of a mass, asking for the
reinstatement of the seven suspended priests and the reopening of two closed seminaries.
35.
More generally, churchgoers and other residents of Cabinda with whom the
Special Rapporteur met testified to human rights violations committed by the military in
the countryside. They explained that in the absence of other institutions where redress
could be sought, the church was the only avenue for people to bring their comments.
There were first hand accounts of rape, arbitrary arrests, and extrajudicial killings
allegedly committed by members of the security forces.
4. Accusations of witchcraft against children
36.
Witchcraft 14 is a belief that is widespread in Angola and neighbouring countries.
It is valued as part of the Bantu cultural tradition and traditional beliefs. In the past, adults
and some children were accused of witchcraft, but from the end of the 1990s in provinces
of northern Angola an unusual number of children were observed living on the streets
having been thrown out by their families. It was reported that most of the children had
been accused of witchcraft, either by their parents, extended family, neighbours, pastors
or soothsayers. 15 After being accused and abandoned, a stigma attaches to children and
they could not return to school, their village or original community.
37.
In Angola, traditional churches such as Catholic, Baptist, Tocsoista, and
Kimbanguista churches have been joined by smaller charismatic and Pentecostal
churches often led by Bakongo and Congolese pastors. These churches are known as
independent or syncretic churches. A large number of the syncretic churches base their
work on herbal treatments and are accepted in the communities since they have become a
parallel health service to the State which has financial and operational constraints in
reaching villages. Whilst not a phenomenon reported throughout the country, children
accused of witchcraft are a cause for concern, given the violent, sometimes lethal
14
US courts have found that Witchcraft and ritual are a religion as long as they occupied
a place in the individual’s life that was parallel to that of more conventional religions and
as long as such beliefs were sufficiently widespread, see Dettmer v Landon 799 F.2d 929
Const Law 84.5(14) Prisons 4(14) and Fleischfresser v Directors of School District 200
15.F.3d 680 Const Law 84.5(3); Schools 167. In this report the Special Rapporteur would
like to distinguish between the belief in witchcraft and the impact of accusations of
witchcraft against children.
15
A similar phenomenon is also reported in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the
Republic of Congo but is also reported to occur in a number of other countries including
Nigeria.