This Article is From Feb 17, 2016

Photos Of Starving 'Witch' Toddler Inspire Massive Donations

Photos Of Starving 'Witch' Toddler Inspire Massive Donations

Danish aid worker Anja Ringgren Loven and 'Hope,' a Nigerian toddler who was accused of being a witch

One of the potent photos shows a blonde aid worker on a Nigerian dirt road, giving water to a sickly, abandoned toddler.

Others show rescuers wrapping the naked and emaciated boy in a blanket, driving him to a treatment center and bathing him.

Accused of being a witch, the tiny boy had spent months trying to survive on the streets.

And he wasn't going to last much longer, Danish aid worker Anja Ringgren Loven said.

"When we heard that the child was only 2 to 3 years old, we did not hesitate," Loven told Huffington Post UK. "A child that young cannot survive a long time alone on the streets. We immediately prepared a rescue mission."

At the time of his rescue, the skeletal child was in critical condition, said Loven, founder of the African Children's Aid Education and Development Foundation (ACAEDF).

She later posted shocking photos of the starving boy on Facebook, inspiring an immediate flood of donations.

Loven told the Huffington Post that the child had been abandoned by his family and left to die. But she offered little else about his background.

On Facebook, beneath a photo of the boy, she noted that there is an ongoing wave of child-witch accusations.

"Thousands of children are being accused of being witches and we've both seen torture of children, dead children and frightened children," she wrote. "This footage shows why I fight."

Belief in witchcraft is widespread in parts of Africa, according to United Nations Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF). In 2010, the agency warned that a growing number of adults and children were being accused of witchcraft, leading to killings and shunning.

Those most at risk, UNICEF noted, were boys who displayed a "solitary temperament, physical deformities or conditions such as autism."

"Many social and economic pressures, including conflict, poverty, urbanization and the weakening of communities, or HIV/AIDS, seem to have contributed to the recent increase in witchcraft accusations against children," UNICEF Regional Child Protection Adviser Joachim Theis said. "Child witchcraft accusations are part of a rising tide of child abuse, violence and neglect, and they are manifestations of deeper social problems affecting society."

A British documentary about child witch hysteria said exact figures were hard to come by, but estimated that in the southwestern Nigerian state of Akwa Ibom -- where the toddler was recently rescued -- there were about 15,000 children who had been labeled witches and abandoned on the streets.

Loven said she decided to call the rescued boy "Hope," and she requested donations to help pay for his hospital bills.

In only two days, she subsequently reported, more than 1 million Danish kroner (or about $150,000 U.S.) had been donated to help the little boy.

"With all the money we can besides giving hope the very best treatment now also build a doctor clinic on the new land and save many more children out of torture!" she said. "It's just so great!"

Days after the boy's rescue, Loven wrote on Facebook that Hope's condition had been upgraded to stable. He was receiving a daily blood transfusion to improve his red blood cell count, but he was still suffering from worms that were "giving him some pain," according to Loven.

Despite the difficult recovery, Hope had begun eating, she noted, and had the power to sit up and smile.

Over the weekend, Loven posted photos of the boy looking noticeably healthier and heavier, particularly in his cheeks. He was even photographed with a smile.

©2016 The Washington Post

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