The Borneo Post

Tanzanian albino children, attacked for body parts, seek care in US

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NEW YORK: Four Tanzanian children with albinism, who lost limbs in brutal superstiti­ondriven attacks, arrived in the United States on Saturday for medical treatment and respite from a homeland where they are persecuted and feared.

Weary from travel, the four stepped off a jet at John F Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport, where Elissa Montanti, founder of the Global Medical Relief Fund (GMRF), was waiting for them.

The New York-based GMRF hosts children from around the world who have been injured in conflict or disaster.

Many need prosthetic­s like the children from Tanzania, where people with albinism live in danger.

Their body parts are highly valued in witchcraft and can fetch a high price. Superstiti­on leads many to believe they are ghosts who bring bad luck.

The children who arrived on Saturday were making a return trip, having outgrown prosthetic­s they received in the United States with the help of GMRF two years ago.

The oldest boy, 15-year- old Emmanuel Rutema, speaks with difficulty. His attackers chopped off one arm and the fingers of the other and tried to pull out his tongue and teeth.

“I’ve come back to get a new arm,” he said in Swahili through an interprete­r, tugging at his empty shirtsleev­e.

Baraka Lusambo, 7, grinned in obvious delight as he took in the bustling airport and swung from the arm of a US Customs and Border Protection officer.

Mwigulu Magesa, 14, and Pendo Noni, 17, hung back, shyly seeking reassuranc­e from Ester Rwela, a social worker who traveled with them from Tanzania.

The children attend boarding school and live in so- called safe houses in Tanzania. They rarely go out in public because it frightens them, said Rwela, a social worker with Under the Same Sun, a charity that advocates for people with albinism.

“They’re traumatize­d. They’re still in fear. They don’t trust anyone,” she said.

GMRF in the last 20 years has hosted more than 200 children getting medical treatment, but the ones from Tanzania stand out, said Montanti.

“We’ve helped children who have stepped on landmines, children who have kicked a can and it exploded, a tsunami, typhoons, but this is so deliberate,” she said.

“When they first came they were extremely timid, no eye contact,” she said. “It was a matter of trust.

“We broke through that, and they know we’re friends. I’m overjoyed to have them back.”

The children are expected to stay about two months, getting medical treatment courtesy of the Shriners Hospital in Philadelph­ia. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Supervisor­y officer Huss (second right) for US Customs and Border Protection escorts; Emmanuel Rutema, Mwigulu Magesa, Elissa Montanti, founder of the Global Medical Relief Fund and Pendo Noni,(left to right) following their arrival at JFK...
Supervisor­y officer Huss (second right) for US Customs and Border Protection escorts; Emmanuel Rutema, Mwigulu Magesa, Elissa Montanti, founder of the Global Medical Relief Fund and Pendo Noni,(left to right) following their arrival at JFK...

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