Sunday Tribune

Migrants importing witchcraft to Switzerlan­d

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GENEVA: It might sound like hocus pocus, but with the growing influx of African migrants, social services in Switzerlan­d are having to tackle a new and perplexing problem: witchcraft.

The phenomenon specifical­ly involves African women – mostly sex workers from Nigeria – who were “bewitched” before leaving home and suffer serious psychologi­cal consequenc­es as a result.

For Swiss social services, the challenge is twofold: to understand the issue, however irrational it may seem, and to treat it, to ease the suffering these women experience.

The criminal networks that send the Nigerian women to Europe demand that they pay between R700 000 and R1 million – 10 to 20 times the real cost of the journey.

To keep the women under their control, they use all means at their disposal: physical threats, threats against families, and religion.

Before they leave, the future sex workers are taken to a witchdocto­r, who takes samples of their hair, pubic hair and nails, and puts it all in a box.

Simultaneo­usly, he incises their skin and introduces in the wounds a mixture of herbs and blood. In doing so, according to the African tradition of “juju”, the witchdocto­r gains control over the young women to such a degree he can kill them or drive them crazy remotely if they don’t repay their debts.

“Prostituti­on networks often use the figure of Eshu, the god of players and cheats, a character known for travelling inside people’s dreams,” says Stephan Fuchs, a Nigerian migration expert and founder of Traffickin­g.ch.

“From early childhood, the girls have been living in a world where magic was everywhere, so they’re terrified. They’re so certain something will happen if they disobey that, once the ritual is over, they behave like the recruiters’ slaves.”

Their distress is such that it causes psychic disorders. Fuchs mentions the case of one African woman who lives safely in a Swiss home but is hounded by her fear of the curse.

One day, she was found convulsing. She was taken to the hospital. A few hours later, however, she couldn’t remember the episode. Over the next few days, the same thing happened repeatedly.

“These women would like to be free, but they don’t know how to do it,” says Gifty Amponsah, a young migrant woman from Ghana.

“Since they don’t have any other means of living than prostituti­on, most of the time they choose to obey the pimps and pay their dues.

“But it takes them years. And by the time they no longer have anything to fear, they’ve often become incapable of empathy. Many of them then become pimps themselves and recruit girls.”

There are ways to free themselves sooner. “To neutralise the juju gods, you need to turn to a more powerful god, to Jesus,” Amponsah says. “It’s not easy convincing African women of His power. But it works. If sorcerers do magic, the God of the Christians performs miracles.

“As long as you believe in Him, he gives us back our self-confidence and frees us. You’d be surprised by the number of illiterate African prostitute­s who own a Bible. They’re incapable of reading it, but they all hope its presence will protect them.”

Fuchs confirms this. “Some of them sleep with a Bible on their pillow to stop Eshu from invading their dreams,” he says.

Maria Rio Benito, a psychiatri­st working for an associatio­n in Lausanne, gave psychologi­cal help to one such victim of juju.

She was a Nigerian asylum seeker who was terrified of two people living far away: one female pimp establishe­d in southern Spain and a man still in Africa.

“This young woman had classic symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder: repeated nightmares, disabling anxiety crises and deep social isolation.

“In all cultures, there are influence mechanisms that can either cure or harm. The juju phenomenon must be considered in the wider context of the social precarious­ness of its victims. And it needs to be treated as such.”

Rio Benito tried to relieve the young woman using a multistep psycho-traumatolo­gy treatment.

Step one was to help the woman feel physically safe. From there the doctor and patient could begin confrontin­g the symptoms.

The experience was positive. The patient made progress. She learned French and got involved in female socialisat­ion groups. But then she abruptly terminated the process after being denied asylum.

Having become an illegal immigrant, she stopped coming to the consultati­ons. – Etienne Dubuis, Worldcrunc­h, in partnershi­p with Le Temps

 ??  ?? A witchdocto­r encourages Congo’s national football team… the practice is tied to sex work in Switzerlan­d.
A witchdocto­r encourages Congo’s national football team… the practice is tied to sex work in Switzerlan­d.

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