Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
February 20, 2015
The idea that Black lives matter to other Blacks is quite laughable. Not even their own children matter to them and there are plenty of reports of parents eating them, selling them as slaves or throwing them to the crocodile god in order to make it rain.
Albino Black lives appear to be of even less value than the common or tribal Black. Although once dead, this type does appear to increase in value and because of this, the parents are usually the prime suspects in cases where they have been chopped up to be used as medicine, for the African equivalent of the NHS.
The mutilated body of an albino toddler has been found in Tanzania with his limbs hacked off, just days after he was taken by machete wielding kidnappers looking to make money from a sick black market trade fueled by a belief in witchcraft.
Yohana Bahati’s body was found on Tuesday afternoon in a forest area near to his home in the Chato district, in northern Tanzania.
His arms and legs had been hacked off, no doubt to be used in potions and charms made by witch doctors for wealthy buyers who believe they will bring luck and riches.
Horrendously, some believe the louder the scream when the body part is removed, the more powerful the potion will be.
Yohana’s mother Ester Jonas, 30, remains in hospital, recovering from the machete blows the kidnappers reined down on her as she desperately tried to protect her son late last Saturday.
Albino body parts are worth thousands of dollars in Tanzania, with an entire body being said to fetch up to $75,000 – about £50,000.
The lure of the money – a fortune for the average person in the east African country – has left Tanzania’s albino population in fear for its life.
Indeed, both adults and children are being made to live in special compounds to keep them safe from criminals hired by the witchdoctors to chop off their highly-prized body parts to be used in these potions.
Eighteen-month-old Yohana was the latest victim of a string of attacks.
Two months ago, four-year-old Pendo Emmanuelle Nandi was taken from her home in Mwanza, which, like Chato, is also on the shores of Lake Victoria.
She has never been seen again.
In both cases, the fathers of the children were arrested in the wake of the kidnappings – suspected by police of being in some way involved.