Ukpabio’s ‘Freedom from witchcraft attacks’ incites hatred and violence against alleged witches In Cross River State


Helen Ukpabio’s “Freedom from Witchcraft Attacks” program is disturbing for several reasons. Firstly, the program reinforces beliefs in witchcraft and incites hatred and violence against supposed witches.

Scheduled from May 8th through 12th, this self-proclaimed evangelist, notorious for witch hunting, will be conducting her church event in Calabar, Cross River state. Many parts of the country have been grappling with the problem of witchcraft accusations and persecution of children and adults.

Recently, a couple accused and subsequently murdered their daughter in Adamawa state. Reports of killings and abuses linked to witchcraft beliefs have surfaced in Benue, Bauchi, Kano, Plateau, and Cross River State. To end violations and abuses linked to witchcraft beliefs, Nigerians need to rally against witch hunters and witch-hunting events.

Nigerians need programs that weaken, not reinforce, superstitious claims of witchcraft. They need events that awaken them from their intellectual slumber, dispelling fears an
d anxieties associated with witchcraft.

Ukpabio makes people believe that witchcraft attacks are real and happen. Her church links lack of happiness, ill health, and poverty to witchcraft attacks, inviting those suffering from such attacks to be freed. Her events are advertised as programs that heal, cure, exorcise, and neutralize witchcraft attacks.

Ukpabio reinforces the notion that covens exist and are places where witchcraft attacks are planned and executed. Hence her poster states that the covens would be in trouble, and witches would be on the run.

More worrisome is the fact that the event incites hatred and violence against alleged witches. Alleged witches are not spiritual entities but fellow human beings, family, and community members, often vulnerable individuals mainly women, children, and people living with disabilities.

Believed or made to believe to be perpetrators of harm and misfortune in families and communities, alleged witches are hated and treated without compassion. Due to the witch-h
unting gospel of the likes of Ukpabio and her church, people attack, banish, torture, and persecute alleged witches, blaming them for their misfortunes including death, illness, accidents, and lack of progress.

To stop witch persecution, witchcraft-reinforcing activities such as Ukpabio’s “Freedom from Witchcraft Attacks” must stop, or action must be taken to halt them. Ukpabio and her so-called Liberty Gospel church must be held to account. They must be brought to justice.

One cannot claim to be combating a disease while allowing people to openly and publicly spread the disease or reinfect society. Witchcraft is a social disease, and it persists because the government and the public have refused to tackle those spreading the disease. People have largely ignored and condoned witchcraft-reinforcing and witch-hunting events.

In particular, Ukpabio’s program spreads the disease of witch hunting in Cross River. This disease has taken a heavy toll on the people and society in Cross River, destroying many family
and community relationships. Thousands of children and adults in the state suspected to be witches have been abandoned or lynched.

Witch hunting persists in the state because the government and the public in Cross River have turned a blind eye to the witchcraft hunting programs of Ukpabio and her church.

As a matter of urgency, multi-level actions and responses are needed to rein in Nigeria’s most notorious witch hunter and her church.

The government should disallow church events and billboards that spread witchcraft fears and incite hatred and violence against alleged witches. They should penalize organizers of such events and dismantle billboards that promote ‘witchcraft attacks’ and witch hunting.

The government should not be deceived or misled to think that Ukpabio’s event is within the bounds of freedom of religion or belief. It is not. It is rather a violation of freedom of religion or belief.

Ukpabio is not a Wiccan or a practitioner of nature worship whose members identify as “witches”. More impo
rtantly, witchcraft accusation is against the law in Cross River and in Nigeria. It is an offense against the state to impute witchcraft or witchcraft attacks.

Ukpabio’s event is an exercise in criminality. It nudges people to go and commit crimes, to accuse, banish, and persecute alleged witches. The program advertises or stages an event on witchcraft accusations. The state should not permit this criminal event to hold.

The people of Cross State should take action because they are the sufferers of the awful consequences of Ukpabio’s witch-hunting ministry. They should send a clear message to Ukpabio and her church, that their message of fear, hatred, and violence has no place in Cross River.

Cross Riverians should use all lawful means to protest and oppose the witch-hunting activities of Ukpabio and her church. Human rights groups, civil society organizations, schools, and community leaders should take action against Ukpabio, the Liberty Gospel church, and other witch-hunting pastors and churches in the s
tate.

Source: Ghana Web