The Citizen (KZN)

Women take message to highest level

- London

– A woman with albinism, whose arms were hacked off as she slept, is to climb Africa’s highest mountain to raise awareness of the abuse and violence faced by people with the condition.

Mariamu Staford will join five other African women with albinism in September to conquer Mount Kilimanjar­o in Tanzania, which rises nearly 6 000m above sea level.

People with albinism – a lack of pigmentati­on in the skin, hair and eyes – are frequently shunned and attacked in Africa. In other countries, they are targeted for their body parts which are prized in witchcraft for use in lucky charms and magical potions.

Expedition co-leader Jane Waithera, 31, said the climb would provide “a platform to amplify our voices from Africa’s highest peak ... as symbols of resilience and empowermen­t”.

Staford, 38, was attacked in 2008 when men armed with machetes broke into her house in Tanzania’s Lake District as she lay with her two-year-old son.

After being fitted with prosthetic­s, she learnt to operate a knitting machine and runs a clothes business. Although she has identified her attackers, no one has been brought to justice.

“She is totally a true inspiratio­n. She is the face of resilience,” Waithera, who was abandoned by her mother as a baby, said from Nairobi.

Hundreds of attacks and killings have been reported across the continent in recent years with body parts reported to fetch tens of thousands of US dollars in an undergroun­d trade centred on Tanzania, Malawi, and Mozambique.

She said women with albinism were also targets of sexual violence because of a myth that sex with a woman with albinism could cure HIV/Aids.

The team, led by mountainee­r and filmmaker Elia Saikaly, will use social media during the seven-day expedition to talk about the challenges they face in life.

Albinism, which affects an estimated one in 15 000 sub-Saharan Africans, increases the risk of sight problems and skin cancer.

All the women taking part are legally blind. They will each have a guide and wear special eye protection.

Waithera said the team, which also includes a Senegalese musician and Nigerian optometris­t, were the strongest women she had ever met. –

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