News

Entertainment

Sports

Business

Africa

Live Radio

Country

Webbers

Lifestyle

SIL

Sosu reveals how he ended up with voodoo marks on his face

Francis-Xavier Sosu, Madina MP

Mon, 15 Nov 2021 Source: www.ghanaweb.live

• Madina MP has revealed his voodoo past

Read full article

• He says he has facial marks that were given him at a shrine

• He is pushing a bill to ban the practice of witchdoctors and witchfinders


Member of Parliament for the Madina Constituency has spoken about his past encounter with voodooism specifically under the 'Trokosi system.'

Francis-Xavier Sosu, who is also a human rights lawyer disclosed that some marks he has on his face were inflicted as a result of he being subjected to the religious practice.

“I have also been a victim of Voodoo practice. If you look carefully at my face, you’ll see marks and these are Voodoo marks. They are marks from a shrine.

“And these are shrines, my mother and dad were all victims of through the Trokosi system,” he added.

“These are all part of religious beliefs that are inimical to the human being, reduce people’s confidence, and don’t promote growth in people,” he stressed.

He is one of three lawmakers who are seeking to amend the Criminal and Other Offences Act, 1960 (Act 29), through a Private Members’ Bill, to prohibit practices by persons claiming to be witch doctors or witchfinders.

The MPs are: Francis Xavier Sosu, Madina MP; Hajia Laadi Ayii Ayamba, Pusiga MP and Dr Godfred Seidu Jasaw, Wa East MP.

In a memo sighted by GhanaWeb, the Bill will also proscribe the declaration, accusation, naming or labelling of another person as a witch; prohibit a person from employing or soliciting anyone to accuse, name, label, indicate, or declare another person as a witch and provide for related matters.

The Private Members’ Bill, according to the Memo, “is in furtherance of an earlier effort by the 7th Parliament to introduce this law pursuant to a Petition by the Sanneh Institute dated August 4, 2021.”



There have been instances in the country where individuals have suffered abuse all in the name of being labelled as “witches” by either their family or persons who have some ‘special’ powers to detect witchcraft.

Those who suffer such abuses are mostly older women.

On Thursday, July 23, 2020, a 90-year-old woman, Madam Akua Denteh was beaten to death in broad daylight at Kafaba near Salaga, a well-known slave market in the 18th and 19th centuries.

Madam Akua Denteh’s ordeal which went viral on social media platforms was brutal and classified unacceptable with rights groups calling for justice to be meted out and for specific legislation to prohibit the practice and situations which give rise to such treatment.

This created hysteria and public outcry with the Ghana Police Service placing GH¢2,000 for information which led to the arrest of some of the alleged culprits.

The first arrest the police made was the chief of Kafaba.

TWI NEWS

Source: www.ghanaweb.live
Related Articles: