Thursday 14 March 2013

KIDNAPPER UNCOVERED IN BAMENDA


Police in Cameroon’s Northwest Region on Tuesday held back irate residents from storming the premises of a sect where authorities rescued 30 children who had been kept in absolute seclusion for several years.
Following a tip-off, police discovered the Salam Church of Christ’s house of worship which locals say was always under tight security, had been used as a holding cell.
Eight male members of the sect, headed by a self-declared evangelist, married and shared about eight women with whom they reportedly fathered the undeclared kids aged between 2 weeks and 9 years with.
The children, who don’t attend school, never stepped out of the compound even for medical care and some of the women were co-wives with some of their daughters.
The Salam Church of Christ is one of thousands of churches, mostly charismatic houses of worship, that operate freely in Cameroon even though only 46 operate legally.
A local government official, Mr Felix Nguele Nguele, said police uncovered the sect, which does not believe in seeking medical care, after one of their sick male members died.
Human trafficking
The religious sect attracted attention when they sought to bury the deceased member, 38-year-old Ngong Harrison, without the knowledge of his family members and outsiders, Mr Nguele said.
The children have been handed over to the ministry of Social Affairs while the women will be catered for by the ministry of Women’s Empowerment.
The sect members insist there is nothing wrong with living the way they do.
Police have taken the men in for questioning and have called on people who might have lost children in any part of Cameroon to come and verify if they can recognise them among those freed from the imposed seclusion.
Cameroon is considered a source, transit point, and destination for trafficked children and women who are subjected to forced labour.
Traffickers usually aim at two or three children, mostly seen in cases where rural parents hand over their children to middlemen who pledge giving them education and a better life in metropolitan areas.
These children sometimes end up working involuntarily as domestic servants, street vendors, miners, prostitutes and plantation labourers.
About 15 per cent of Cameroonian children between 10 and 14 years are working, according to a 2008 report by the US department of Labour.
Rights activists had warned that traffickers had resorted to kidnapping their victims, as increased public awareness cut the number of children given to middlemen.
culled from Cameroon Online

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