An Indian
couple and four of their children were hacked to death by a mob of
villagers who accused them of
practicing witchcraft and making their
children sick, police in the eastern state of Odisha said on Monday.
The victims were asleep in their mud house in the hamlet of Lahanda in Keonjhar district, when a group of around five people armed with axes broke in.
The
suspects, believed to be relatives of the family, accused the victims
of being behind for a spate of frequent illnesses among infants in the
village, said police.
District Superintendent of Police Kavita Jalan said two surviving children alerted authorities.
The
police reached the village in the early hours of Monday to find the
mutilated bodies in pools of blood, an axe abandoned inside the hut, and
a young boy still alive.
"The eight-year-old boy was found by police gasping between the dead bodies,"
Jalan told Thomson Reuters Foundation, adding that a search was being
conducted to find the suspects, who had fled the village after the
incident.
The practice of branding men and women
as witches and assaulting or killing them remains common is some parts
of India, particularly among tribal communities, despite there being a
law against it.
There were 160 cases of murders
linked to witch hunts in 2013, and 119 in 2012, data from the National
Crime Records Bureau shows.
In a separate
incident, police on Monday recovered the remains of a man who was beaten
to death and burnt by a mob over allegations of sorcery in Rayagada
district, also in Odisha state.
Charity workers
say as well as trying to disabuse some tribes of superstitious beliefs,
the government needs to focus on education and economic development.
India's
tribes make up more than 8 percent of its 1.2 billion population. Yet
many live on the margins of society - inhabiting remote villages and
eking out a living from farming, cattle rearing and collecting and
selling forest produce.
Social indicators in these
communities, including literacy, child malnutrition and maternal
mortality, are among the lowest in the country. Neglect by the
authorities and a Maoist insurgency in the country's central tribal belt
have further exacerbated their plight.
"People
believe in superstition because they do not have health care. They are
uneducated. Unless we provide them these basic facilities, the situation
will not improve," said Debendra Sutar, secretary of the Odisha
Rationalist Society, a charity.

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