24 June 2015

US doctors help Tanzanian children harmed in albino attacks

US doctors help Tanzanian children harmed in albino attacks


 
(Alejandro A. Alvarez/Philadelphia Daily News via AP). Baraka Cosmas Rusambo, 6 years old with albinism from Tanzania, is treated at Global Medical Relief Fund and Shriners Hospital for Children in Philadelphia on Wednesday, June 17, 2015.  In March, a...
 
(Alejandro A. Alvarez/Philadelphia Daily News via AP). Pendo Sengerema, 16, left, watches as Kabula Nkalango, 18, right, assists Mwigulu Matonange, 12,  open a bottle of water at Global Medical Relief Fund and Shriners Hospital for Children in Philadel...
 
(Alejandro A. Alvarez/Philadelphia Daily News via AP). Baraka Cosmas Rusambo, 6 years old with albinism from Tanzania, is treated at Global Medical Relief Fund and Shriners Hospital for Children in Philadelphia on Wednesday, June 17, 2015.  In March, a...
 
(Alejandro A. Alvarez/Philadelphia Daily News via AP). Luis F. Velasquez, Certified Prosthetics,  creates a mould for a prosthetic for Baraka Cosmas Rusambo, 6, of Tanzania at Global Medical Relief Fund and Shriners Hospital for Children in Philadelphi...


PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Five Tanzanian children attacked and robbed of limbs because they are albino are being outfitted with prosthetics at a Philadelphia hospital.
The Philadelphia Inquirer reports that New York City-based Global Medical Relief Fund connected the children, ages 6 to 16, with prosthetic specialists at Shriners Hospital.
Hundreds of albinos have been attacked in Africa since 1998.
Tanzanians subscribing to superstition see them as demons or ghosts with mystical powers whose body parts are used in witchcraft and potions. Last year, Tanzanian authorities outlawed practices that used albino body parts, making it a crime punishable by death.
On Wednesday, doctors measured the height, weight and blood pressure of the children and planned out how the prosthetics would be fitted.
The children will remain in the U.S. until receiving the prosthetics.
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