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Record number of children in England are abused because parents think they are witches or possessed by black magic

Daily Mail reveals that the number of children suspected of being abused due to witchcraft, witchcraft and black magic beliefs in the UK has increased to the highest level.

Official figures show that 2,180 children were defined as victims of potential abuse connected to belief or belief last year.

The disturbing figure represents a 49 percent increase in 2017, when 1,460 suspected victims were identified by social services.

Experts believe that the real figure may be even higher because of the fear that the authorities are more afraid of interfering with the fear of disturbing religious beliefs.

Megan Manson of the National Secular Society, ‘Thousands of children in England have abused religion or beliefs and the increase in these figures is worried.

We know that the fear of criticizing religious or cultural beliefs can prevent cope with these forms of abuse.

‘Authorities should always provide priority to any reluctance of children’s safety and prosperity to criticize religion or culture.’

The cases of abuse of belief or belief saw the children who were accused of hosting demons exposed to demons and ritual ‘cutters’ evil’.

Eight -year -old Victoria (in the picture) died 25 years ago after being tortured during a sadistic abuse campaign

Others were damaged, because relatives believed that their actions brought bad luck – like looking for a wrong number and allowing malicious souls to enter the house.

The most famous cases were eight -year -old Victoria Climbié, tortured by relatives who believed that they had in 2000.

He was sent to England by the UMAN family that he would receive a better education from the native ivory coast.

Instead, he died of hunger, tortured, beaten with bicycle chains, and held a freezing bath by his great aunt Marie Therese Kouao and his partner Carl Manning.

Eventually, when he died of multiple organ failure in a hypothermia and a scalide apartment in the east of London, he was discovered with 128 separate injuries on his body.

Kouao and Manning claimed that Victoria, who died only 3, 10 lb, believed that they had bad souls before they were imprisoned in 2001.

In 2002, former bus driver Manning apologized to Victoria’s parents for his role in ‘nausea’ death. Last month, he lost an offer to be released with conditional release.

Ten years later, 15 -year -old Kristy Bamu was beaten and drowned on the 2010 Christmas Day by his sister and his boyfriend in East London after being accused of being a witch.

He was tortured with Kristy, knife, rod, metal rods, hammer and pliers for four days.

He had to pray for ‘salvation’ and rejected food and water. His brothers were beaten with him, but he escaped from more attacks after ‘confessing’ to be a witch.

Victoria's great aunt Marie-Therese became a criminal partner in the murder of Kouao (left)

Victoria’s great aunt Marie-Therese became a criminal partner in the murder of Kouao (left)

15 -year -old Kristy Bamu drowned and drowned after being accused of being a witch by his sister in 2010 and his boyfriend in East London in 2010.

15 -year -old Kristy Bamu drowned and drowned after being accused of being a witch by his sister in 2010 and his boyfriend in East London in 2010.

Following the murder, Magalie Bamu (left) and Eric Bikubi (right) were imprisoned for life

Following the murder, Magalie Bamu (left) and Eric Bikubi (right) were imprisoned for life

Bikubi and Magalie were sentenced to imprisonment, and Judge David Paget tells them: ‘Even though it is real, he cannot excuse attack another person instead of the murder of another person’.

Only days before Kristy’s death, a mother in Hackney torn apart his four -year -old daughter during a crazy attempt to expel ‘bad souls’.

Shayma Ali drowned the child before stabbing it with a kitchen knife 40 times.

Later, the police said that his daughter believes that he had a soul described in the Qur’an.

Ali was detained in a mental hospital indefinitely in a mental hospital.

Authorities are thought to be widely reported in some African and Asian Diaspora communities, but not limited to a belief, national or ethnic group.

Children with disabilities, twins and epilepsy, autism and even small behavioral problems have been more vulnerable to historical charges of witchcraft.

Nimco Ali, the general manager of five foundations, said: ‘No community is immune to the sad reality of child abuse. However, the increase in violence against children under the label of witchcraft is deeply disturbing.

This is a complex issue. Many abuses also struggle with mental health, but there is no excuse for disagreement. Cultural sensitivity, as we have seen in response to female genital injury (FGM), often meant a blind glance.

‘He contributed not only to the lack of prosecution, but also to the absence of prevention measures.

We have to do more to protect children. This begins with this abuse because it is because it is and struggling with it.

‘Protection professionals should be clear: this culture, not abuse.

They should see the vulnerable little girls and boys who need protection, not communities. ‘

Perhaps the most creepy and permanent Mystery continues to be an example of ‘man’, a young African child with a young African child withdrawn from the Thames River in London in 2001.

He saw his passing body swimming near the Tower Bridge.

His head, arms and legs were skillfully removed, a ritual ‘muti’ killing that detectives believed – a ceremony believed to produce strong magical drugs.

Between the ages of four and seven and only one pair of distinctive orange shorts, the child recently came from Nigeria.

To date, the real name and murderers have never been defined. He lies in a unmarked grave in South London.

33 -year -old Mardoche Yembi was only 12 years old when he was branded as a witch and was subjected to two -month devil extraction.

33 -year -old Mardoche Yembi was only 12 years old when he was branded as a witch and was subjected to two -month devil extraction.

Now 33 -year -old Mardoche was born in the Democratic Republic of Congo and moved to England after his mother died

Now 33 -year -old Mardoche was born in the Democratic Republic of Congo and moved to England after his mother died

Mardoche's story was transformed into Kindoki Witch Boy, a film documenting how he was fired by a priest in the English-Kongol community.

Mardoche’s story was transformed into Kindoki Witch Boy, a film documenting how he was fired by a priest in the English-Kongol community.

33 -year -old Mardoche Yembi was only 12 years old when he was branded as a witch and was subjected to two -month devil extraction.

Mardoche was sent from the Democratic Republic of Congo to live with her aunt and north London when her mother died during birth.

However, relatives accused him of bad luck to his family and the result of Kindoki – for a term for the witchcraft used in the Central African country.

Traumatic experiences were transformed into a company called Kindoki Witch Boy, earlier this year.

The Local Government Association described suspicious belief -based abuse figures as ‘deep worrying’ and asked for a better finance of the Social Services of the Council.

A spokesman said: ‘These numbers are deeply worried and councils are determined to act on any sign of abuse.

‘The truth is that the councils receive approximately 1,700 references to children’s social care services every day and continue to face assembly pressures that support children and young people.

‘Children’s services are sufficiently financed in the autumn budget, so that the councils have resources to invest in early aid and intervention to prevent children from reaching the crisis point.’

Professor Charlotte Baker from the University of Lancaster said: ‘Abuse of belief or belief in the United Kingdom can often cause physical, emotional or psychological damages that target children or vulnerable individuals.

“These abuse include spirit ownership, witchcraft, ritual abuse, and relevant harmful practices that occur in many parts of the world today.

‘It is very difficult to identify and address such abuse, and in their work, efforts to improve the understanding among those who may encounter the victims of these abuse.’

An international network colleague Leethan Bartholemow added: ‘A much more problem:’

‘There is much more work to do.’

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