This Blog's Guiding Maxim:-

"The person who shies at the possibility of increased responsibilities or at the prospect of future uncertainties is hardly worthy of life itself, for life consists of uncertainties, problems and challenges of various types."

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Under the Same Sun - A site out to fight the cause of the Albinos

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You can contact the blog editor through this e-mail address: (ritchmbuthia at gmail dot com)

Friday, January 30, 2009

Mizengo Pinda Apologises over "Albino Remarks" in Tears

Mizengo Pinda, Tanzania's prime minister, in tears as he apologises in Parliament

Apologizing for the statement he made during his visit in Lake Zone last week that albino killers should also be killed on the spot, the Premier...Read the Rest Here

...But the battle against albino killings is still on!

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Bandying of words over the Albino issue is Tiring; We need action, action, action...

The opposition in Parliament has called for resignation of Prime Minister Mizengo Pinda over a statement he made last week that people who kill albinos should also be killed...Read the Rest Here

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The Opposition yesterday lashed out at Prime Minister Mizengo Pinda following his declaration that people caught killing albinos should also be killed...Read the Rest Here

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

"Albino Killers should be killed too"...

People caught red-handed killing albinos should also be killed on the spot, Prime Minister Mizengo Pinda has reiterated...Read the Rest

Licensed to be a Witch?

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Traditional Healers not Happy with Govt. Decision

Traditional doctors have criticised the Government's decision to revoke their licences in a raft of measures announced Friday to stop albino killings in the country...Read the Rest

"Under the Same Sun" in the News

The article below was in the This Day Newspaper edition of Tuesday, 27th January, 2009. I have posted it here in its entirety.

Canadian NGO seeks global intervention in albino killings

THISDAY REPORTER & AGENCIES
Dar es Salaam

A CANADIAN organization fighting for the rights of albinos has called for the intervention of the international community to stop the slaughter of people living with the condition in Tanzania.

The ’Under The Same Sun’ organization, whose founder is Canadian businessman Peter Ash, implores all members of civil society around the world to join hands in the cause.

’’Please rise up for human dignity,’’ said Ash, who himself has albinism. ’’Rise up for those being butchered week in and week out. Learn from the holocaust, where too many people took far too long to act.’’

’’The heart-wrenching cry of 170,000 people with albinism in Tanzania is: ’We are being hunted like animals...please help us!’ The global community must therefore act quickly,’’ he added.

Ash also called on media and political leaders to act swiftly so that no more children are mutilated and killed.

The trade in albino body parts in Tanzania is reported to be very lucrative, with one leg yielding up to $2,000 (approx. 2.6m/-). This market in human body parts stems from beliefs promoted by witchdoctors that the blood, hair or other parts of a person with albinism, when combined in a special potion, will make its user rich.

Todate, there have been 41 documented cases of people with albinism being butchered in Tanzania. The local albino community places the murder toll much higher, at approximately 60 cases. Many of those targeted are children - in one reported case the victim was just six months.

Late last year, Ash returned from Tanzania where he had led an international delegation on a fact-finding mission to examine the witchcraft-related murders of Tanzanians with albinism. The delegation met with several senior government officials and presented a petition of over 5,000 signatures from around the world, expressing alarm about the murders.

However, despite government assurances that everything possible is being done to stop these gruesome crimes, the public record shows that there has not yet been a single prosecution of any person apprehended in connection with the murders.

Albinism is a genetic condition causing the absence of pigmentation in the hair, skin and eyes. It affects one in 20,000 people globally. Current local estimates place the incidence of albinism at one in 3,000.

Government wants Traditional Healers Monitored

The government has called on the Tanzania Association of Traditional Medicine to devise a monitoring mechanism that would help it root out unlicensed traditional healers...Read the Rest

Monday, January 26, 2009

Mixed reactions on the Prime Minister's directive

NCCR-Mageuzi party has criticised Prime Minister Mizengo Pinda over the statements he made during his tour in Tabora Region that Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) youths should take action against suspected albino killers ...Read the Rest

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Judge not…

It is very wrong to judge people by the colour of their skin. The good Lord talks against this vehemently in His Word. He, in effect, says that we should not judge that we may not be judged. The only one who has the capacity to judge is God alone.

Thinking of albinos as queer beings is judging them by the colour of their skin. Instead of judging other people, we should look for ways of strengthening our relationships with them. That way we’ll be making the world a better place to live in.

Just what Tanzanian Albinos Need: This Man with a no-nonsense Approach to Matters of Import

I love the approach to matters of import exhibited by this senior man in the Tanzanian government. He is a very serious man. Simply put: he says what he means and means what he says.
This man is in the name of the Prime Minister of Tanzania Mr. Mizengo Peter Pinda.

He made a very profound statement two days ago, both in word and in deed, concerning the albino issue.
What he said clearly resonates with what we have been saying time and time again in this blog.

With a straight face and a booming voice, he said, in no uncertain terms, that the public needs to be told what measures are taken against those caught in connection with killing and maiming of albinos.

He said that when the authorities concerned fail to make public the measures taken against such people, they (the authorities) lose credibility in the eyes of the public.

Their silence, in effect, spurs on the acts of violence against albinos. This is because there seems to be no measure taken against perpetrators of these dastardly acts.

I am confident to say that this was a wake-up call to those in power to do all that is in their power to stem the killing of albinos in Tanzania.

Such words, coming from the leader of government business in Tanzania, reaffirm the commitment of the government to deal with, and totally “annihilate”, this disturbing issue.

But the speed at which the “albino issue” is being dealt with here is wanting. It is not fast enough. It seems that some quarters of the government are not doing what they should in this fight.

The PMs Commitment
Mr. Mizengo Pinda reinforced his commitment to fighting the cause of albinos in Tanzania by taking a Standard Two albino boy (his name is George Bush) into his care. He pledged to taken care of his welfare and schooling. He added that he would make sure that George Bush gets the best education (up to the highest levels of education).

This is very consoling and encouraging, Mr. Pinda.

If only we had more leaders with your kind of heart! How I wish!

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

A Humbling Chat with Peter Ash

I was filled with a mixture of surprise and utter joy when Peter Ash, CEO of THE NDG FINANCIAL CORPORATION, called me on my mobile phone sometime this week. He is the man behind the site Under the Same Sun – a site out to fight the cause of albinos.

When Peter congratulated me on the work I’m doing in this site – creating awareness about the plight of albinos in Tanzania – I was more than humbled. Yes, humbled. Humbled that this site is being read by people who are at the helm of their countries and organizations.

For the 16 minutes that we talked, Peter’s enthusiasm was almost tangible. I could feel it. The acme of his enthusiasm came when he talked of the plans he has to champion an albino awareness campaign in Tanzania. I was, and definitely I am, impressed.

He also told me that being an albino in a Caucasian society, he has also had his fair share of challenges especially when he was young. His school mates used to call him names. He also had problems with his eye sight (a common problem experienced by albinos the world over).

But despite his challenging start at life, he has risen up the ranks and is now the CEO of his own company. He also has a good education to boot.

This, Peter and I agreed, is unlike what most albinos in Africa (Tanzania in particular) can achieve in a life-time. This is because, in Tanzania, albinism is seen as a curse and albinos are treated like people who do not have the right to be on the face of the earth. This has been compounded by the recent spate of albino killings in Tanzania that have shocked the world.

Parents with albino children fear to let them go to school for fear that something bad may befall their children. In this way, the fate of the albino children is sealed: without an education, they’ll more certainly lead lives of beggary.

We also talked about the principal spark that fuels albino killings in Tanzania: witchcraft and sorcery. What stands out from what we said about this issue is that witchcraft and sorcery are vices that are empowered by ignorance. Before any significant change can come about, this ignorance must first be stamped out.

It is also worthy to note that witchcraft is a deep-seated and equally deep-rooted problem in the Tanzanian society – for even some people in government use witchcraft to stay in power. It is something that can never be wished away.

The good thing is that one of the principal reasons why Under the Same Sun was set up, is to help get ways and means to deal with the problems bedeviling the albino society.

Peter Ash, I know this is a tall order but with concerted effort, enthusiasm and the will to rise up against all odds, this monster will be routed; this great war will be won. Go for it!

Monday, January 12, 2009

Possible Economic Ventures for Albinos in Mwanza

The Tanzania Albino Society (TAS), Mwanza chapter, is looking at sewing and dyeing clothes as possible economic ventures for its members...Read the Rest Here

Saturday, January 10, 2009

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Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Fight against Albino Killings enters New Front

It is a beautiful thing when the society is seen to wake from deep slumber and realizes that the onus of taking care of its own, rests squarely on its (society’s) shoulders.

In fact, of late, many people have been raising their voices to shout down the killings of albinos in Tanzania and the region as a whole. This is a good start. But it is not good enough.

It is not that I’m trying to water down what has already been done. Never. But I believe it’s time we metamorphosed from the “talking” phase to the “action” phase.

The good news is that some sections of the society have come of age and have decided to cross to the next phase without having to be pushed or shoved.

On 5th of January this year 350 mobile phones were given to the albino society (to be distributed amongst themselves). These are intended to be used to make it easy for albinos to report (to the police and other security organs in the society) injustices perpetrated against them.

In the same vein, 50 special phones, for receiving info about criminals, were given to the police. These gadgets will greatly ease communication between the police and albinos (and the public as a whole). Thus, speedier apprehension of suspects is expected to be the fruit of this initiative courtesy of mobile phone providers Zain and Vodacom.

Well-done Zain and Vodacom. May other players in the society see the light and follow suit.

Police arm Albinos with cell phones to Fight killings

Friday, January 2, 2009

Happy New Year

How are you good people? How’s the New Year treatin’ you? I wish to thank you all for supporting this blog as it endeavors to “out” the ill that is albino killings.


The year 2008 was a challenging year that saw so many vices coming to the knowledge of the public. But the one that jolted us more than the others was the killing of our dear brothers and sisters: the albinos.

I wish and hope that this year will see an end to this crime against humanity. I wish and hope, too, that there will be a deep-rooted political will (in the political class) to vanquish the demon that is albino killings. You know, where there is will there is a way.

Lip service does not help much. Action does. I believe this year will be one of action and not just mere babble.

Let’s hold hands and fight to the finish line together, shall we?

Happy New Year!!!

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Do People Really Understand the Fight against Albino Killings?

The other day I was at a barber’s trimming my hair when a teenage albino boy entered the room. I saw him in the mirror in front of me as he entered. In his hands he carried a 20-litre water container (full of water). I figured that he was one of the many water-peddlers that are part of the hurly burly of life in Dar es Salaam.

As the albino was emptying the water into another container in the room, the barber stopped working on my hair and directed his gaze in the direction of the water-peddler. I gathered, from the barber’s expression I saw in the mirror, that he was not at all amused.

The burly barber blurted: “At what time did I tell you to bring water here? It seems you are taking me for granted.”

The albino seemed unaffected by the complaint of his client for he was grinning the while the barber ranted.

The barber was irked the more by the grinning of the teenager for, to him, it was like reducing his concerns to nothing.

The albino was by the door ready to go out, when the barber said:

“If you do that again…,”he said, as he looked in the mirror into my eyes and continued, "I’ll surely cut off one of your fingers. I could get a lot of money doing that, you know. So, please, don’t provoke me!”

The albino was out the door before the burly man could finish.

The statement of the barber jolted me and it got me thinking.

Was that statement an open declaration on behalf of the society that people are ready to do anything, however murky, to get cheap money?

Are people concerned about the welfare of people whose lives are in danger by virtue of how they naturally are?

Why don’t people choose their words carefully when talking to people whose lives have the sword of Damocles hanging over them?

Do people really understand what the fight against albino killings entails (and that it takes the whole community to do the “policing”)?

What should be done?
The Tanzanian public should be made even more aware about the albino issue. More and more albino stories should be brought to the fore (but journalists should be careful not to blow things out of proportion in the spur of the moment).
Lastly, people should be made aware of the prosecutions of the perpetrators of impunity as far as the killing of albinos is concerned. In the same vein, more perpetrators should be brought to book.
Tanzanian leaders should lead in the fight against albino killings – from in front – in their talk, walk and attitude.

[I wish to laud the stand of some religious leaders in Tanzania who have been bold enough to use their podiums to decry this evil being visited on albinos. May the good Lord richly bless you].

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

The guarantee of Albinos’ right to life is under threat

Post by Daily News Columnist G. Madaraka Nyerere
A few days ago I stopped at a roadblock and a police officer asked me to give a ride to an albino woman who was taking her child to a clinic. At a time when albinos are hunted down...
Read the rest here

Albino kidnap plotters to appear in court

Eight people arrested here last Sunday for allegedly plotting to kidnap and kill one Hussein Power (15) an albino herdsman...Read the rest here

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Businessman who wanted a “live” albino hits wall with bare Fists

A well-known vehicle spare parts dealer together with seven other people has been arrested in Mbarali District, Mbeya Region, for attempting to kidnap and kill an albino. [Mbeya Region is in the South-West of Tanzania and it borders Malawi]

They are said to have attempted to kidnap 15-year-old Hussein Power (an albino). The kidnappers had been promised Tsh I Million (approx. USD 835) on “successful delivery” of the boy (alive) to the spare parts businessman (for he is the one who had commissioned the kidnapping).

The businessman, Benedicto Mwachembe and his accomplices were caught one fine morning recently after their failed kidnap attempt.

On the material day of the crime, Hussein Power who grazes his family’s cattle did not go out to graze. His young brother, Sai Power (12), went in his stead. Hussein was left at home.

While Sai was tending the cattle in the field, he was suddenly surrounded by the suspects who wielded machetes and an assorted array of crude weapons. They asked the young boy where his albino brother was. He told them that he was at home.

When they left, Sai ran home to tell his mother what he had witnessed. The young boy said that two of the suspects were his relatives (from his father’s side of the family).

When the police got onto the heels of the suspects, one thing led to another and all of them were caught. When they were interrogated they admitted that they were on the payroll of the businessman for he was the one who had asked them to get the albino for him.

The police went to the home of the businessman to further their investigation. While there, they discovered a deep hole in one of the rooms. The hole was covered with a curtain on top.

It was learnt that that is where he, the spare parts dealer, “finished off” his victims.

One of the policemen said (about the room): “The room is very dark and is extremely scary. It is also very dangerous. It is made in such a way that even if victims screams on top of their lungs, no one can hear them from outside.”

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Who will Speak up for US if we don’t Speak up for THEM?

When I look at the albino killings in Tanzania and the attitude of people towards the same (the uncaring attitude exhibited by some of us), I can’t help but think of the sober message in a poem titled FIRST THEY CAME which was written by the prominent German anti-Nazi activist, Pastor Martin Niemöller.

FIRST THEY CAME...

In Germany they came first for the Communists,
And I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist.
Then they came for the Jews,
And I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew.
Then they came for the trade unionists,
And I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist.
Then they came for the Catholics,
And I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant.
Then they came for me,
And by that time no one was left to speak up for me.


…I shudder and cringe at the thought of such a situation ever happening TO ME…


My brothers and sisters, speaking up for albinos is our divine responsibility. Another thing, you don’t have to be an albino to speak out.

Taking the government to task and fervently asking why these heinous acts of violence against albinos are being perpetrated under the very 'bulbous' nose of the state, is the first step to much-needed healing.

Something has to give; something's gotta be done!

Well, if we don't speak up for the hurting, shunned, sidelined and…hunted members of our society, who will speak up for us when the perpetrators of this dastardly act come for us.

Food for thought, this.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Women lawyers in Tanzania fault pace of tackling albino killings

A non-governmental organisation, Women Legal Aid Centre (WLAC) yesterday expressed its disappointment at the authorities` slow pace in tackling killing of albinos in Tanzania, which has seriously...
Read the rest here

Monday, December 8, 2008

Help curb albino killings, academicians challenged

Lecturers at the Mzumbe University in Morogoro have challenged all learned persons to join ranks with the government to help stop albino killings and other social vices that put the nation to shame.
Read the rest here...

The Prayer of an Albino in Tanzania

With a contrite heart I come to You, O God. Your word tells me that I am inscribed on the palm of Your hand. That word gives me strength and confidence to stand before You and pour out my heart.

You know my predicament O God. I have no happiness anymore. Joy vanished from my life long time ago. Living in Tanzania has become a living hell to me and to my brothers and sisters.

O Mighty God, You say that You created all human beings in Your image and likeness. So if all human beings are in Your image and likeness then there’s no greater human being. Or is there? Why, then, are things so unfair here on earth?
Some people think that You, O God, put in me (hidden somewhere, I don’t know where) a magical charm. A charm that if accessed by people who need instant wealth, then zap! it is theirs (the wealth).

If it is really there, O God, why did You not put it in other people, too. Your word says that you are a fair God. Did You design that I should be hunted like an antelope and killed mercilessly so that people can “extract” that which they deem is in me (that they badly need to bid farewell to beggary)?

I know I look different from other people that You created, O God. My hair, my eyes, my skin are all different from those of other people. I look pale and every time I pass somewhere a dozen heads turn in my direction.

Walking in the sun is a challenging experience. My light skin is always on the receiving end of the “brutal” nature of the sun. My eyes, too, are affected by the sun’s rays. I have to squint as I chart my way around. I prefer staying at home to going out. But then, that can never always be the case as I have to fend for myself. So I have to go out.

As I go about my day to day business, I have learnt to look behind every now and then to try to determine if there is anyone who is following me. Or even to see if there are any curious looking people so that I can take off at the speed of light! The feeling in me at these times is akin to that felt by a bull that realizes it is being led to an abattoir.

God, please don’t smile as this is something that makes me wish that I were long dead.

The media reports the killings of my brothers and sisters in various parts of my country, Tanzania. They are hacked and slain mercilessly. This happens just so that the mutilators and murderers can get parts of their bodies.

O God, why do You let these people continue living. Strike them with lightning! Blot them from the face of the earth. We are suffering, O God.

I honestly don’t know how long I have before they also come for my head, legs and hands. I don’t know how long I have left before they hack me. I don’t know how long…

I dread that day. I dread the day I will hear the long and strident knock on my door. I dread the day I’ll see menacing-looking individuals wielding machetes and baying for my blood. Oh, I dread…!

O God, please save me from my neighbours. Please save me from the strangulating hands of a corrupt society.

O God, You are my only hope in these trying times. Please don’t turn Your eyes away from me.

Amen.
The Legs of an Albino recovered at a Witchdoctor's

The Legs of an Albino recovered at a Witchdoctor’s

It was in the news the other day (on ITV). The presenter of the news warned us, the viewers, that the images we were about to see were disturbing. I braced myself to face the disturbing images.

The story was of an albino boy who was killed with his head being chopped off and both his legs being hewn off and taken away. The boy’s mother who is a cripple told the sad story to journalists.

When the alarm (of the killing) was raised, a thorough search was conducted by the authorities in Bukombe District where the boy’s home was.

One thing led to another and, finally, the mutilated legs of the boy were found in a local witchdoctor’s house. The pictures of these dismembered limbs sent shivers down my spine. I couldn’t bring myself to understand this heartlessness and gory inhumanity meted on a fellow human being.

To add salt to injury, the boy was the bread-winner for the family as the mother is a cripple. Talk of a family blighted and thrown down a bottomless abyss!

My Two Cents: Local witchdoctors should undergo a rigorous and exhaustive system of ascertaining their “genuineness” and “integrity in the business” before they are licensed. Witchdoctors who are found to be advocating for the killing of albinos (or prescribing the usage of albino body parts) should be de-licensed. Legal proceedings should also be instituted against the proponents of this cowardly act.

The responsibility of making sure albinos are safe lies not only on the shoulders of the government, but also on the shoulders of the community and society that surrounds them.

The Prayer of an Albino in Tanzania

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Albino Killings: It's a blame Game in the Government

The Home Affairs ministry has cited inadequate resources as the reason for its failure to curb the problem of albino killings and laid the blame on the Treasury.

``The killings are an embarrassment and a disgrace to the good image of our country. Police are failing to operate well...
Read the rest here...

Monday, December 1, 2008

Mariam Stanford’s Double Tragedy

Mariam Stanford is the albino whose arms were chopped off by her neighbour (together with his accomplices) recently in Ngara District in Tanzania.

She was six months pregnant at the time tragedy struck. I remember in the days that followed this “heinous crime”, when still in hospital, she had been appealing to well wishers to help her take care of her unborn child when it was eventually born. She knew it would be close to impossible to take care of her unborn child (when it was born) as she does not have hands.

But alas, apparently she will not be in need of anyone to take care of her unborn child. She has lost her child through a miscarriage. Quite unfortunate and cruel.

Mariam has gone through a lot of heartache. This is clearly a traumatizing period in her life and that of her family. Thousands of other albinos in Tanzania have their own versions of the trauma that they have had to contend with since this violence against them started. This is a really difficult period for them.

Concrete action, and not just mere words of threat against the perpetrators of the violence, needs to be taken (and fast!).

Meanwhile :
The authorities have barred journalists and media practitioners from interviewing Mariam at her hospital bed for fear that the media will paint a gloomy picture of the whole affair thus blow things (the plight of albinos in Tanzania) out of proportion.

I can’t help but wonder what the authorities in Tanzania take journalists for: A bunch of people who don’t know what they are doing; professionals who are not guided by codes of ethics thus they can write and say anything just anyhow; people who are less human thus they have little or no respect for human suffering; people who don’t know what to report and what to give weight to in a story. I wonder.

I also question the authorities’ decision to deny the general public an insight into the story by barring the media from getting information from the horse’s own mouth.

Being a journalist myself I know that this is not fair to the general populace for journalism’s first obligation is to the truth and its first loyalty is to the citizens.

The Society of Professional Journalists believes that public enlightenment is the forerunner of justice and the foundation of democracy. The duty of the journalist is to further those ends by seeking truth and providing a fair and comprehensive account of events and issues.

Can justice be seen to have been done? This is a clarion call to you, Sirs…

Four cops nabbed in Shinyanga over albino killings