Document #1152749
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
Adaklo Amfoi village could not be located
in the Atlas of the World. However, in a 9 February 1998
interview with the Research Directorate, a professor of Sociology
and Anthropology at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor stated
that the Volta region in eastern Ghana is known for a fetish
practice known as Trokosi. A 1 April 1997 Reuters report
explains that Trokosi are "women given to fetish priests
as slaves, usually at an early age, by families who believe they
must appease the fetish or spirit of the shrine because a family
member committed a crime." The family believes that if the fetish
is not appeased, it is capable of sending diseases and other
calamities, which will gradually kill the whole family. Reuters
reports states that the number of Tokosi in the Volta
region is approximately 4,500 excluding their estimated 16,000
children (ibid.).
Reuters further explains that practice is
rooted in traditional voodoo beliefs whereby the girls were
initially given to the crocodiles or killed. "Later the priests
agreed to keep them as slaves, mainly to work the shrine's land, do
the priest's housekeeping and share his bed" (ibid.).
According to a 20 January 1997 Ottawa
Citizen report, the tradition [trokosi] dates as far
back as the 17the century and extends into Togo, Benin and Nigeria,
and
stems from a world view that sees justice
and punishment in communal rather than individual terms; an
individual who has no connection to a crime may be punished to
spare others. Similarly, when one person's offence goes unpunished,
it is believed, vengeance may be wreaked upon an entire
community.
The Ottawa Citizen further states that the
girls are not recruited or captured but given away by their
families who share this world view. The girls must be virgins, are
considered property of the priest and only the priest can release
them. However, the family of the released girl must replace her
with another one so as to ensure that the gods remain appeased
(ibid.).
According to Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices 1997,
Parliament has yet to pass a law explicitly
prohibiting Trokosi. The practice persists because of deeply
entrenched traditional beliefs, and it is therefore unlikely that
any legislative prohibition alone would eliminate the practice.
Over the past few years, the CHRAJ [Commission for Human Rights and
Administrative Justice] has conducted an awareness campaign with
traditional leaders and practitioners in an effort to bring the
practice to an end. The CHRAJ's efforts have been taken in
conjunction with an NGO called International Needs, which has had
some success in approaching village authorities and fetish priests
at 10 of the 76 shrines, winning the release of 474 Trokosi slaves
to date, and retraining them for new professions. The organization
is working for additional releases. Including work by other
organizations, the total number of slaves released was 672 at
year's end (sharenet).
The professor at the University of Michigan
stated that there are no sanctions against women who do not want to
serve as priestesses because the 1992 Constitution of Ghana makes
"clear provisions" about women's and children's rights. However, he
explained that those working to free Trokosi have had
"some difficulty because the girls themselves fear to leave because
they believe that someting evil will happen to them." For
additional information on the Trokosi, please consult
Response to Information Request GHA25263.E of 18 October 1996,
which is available at Regional Documentation Centres.
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the Research Directorate within time constraints. This Response is
not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any
particular claim to refugee status or asylum.
References
Atlas of the World. 1994. Ninth
edition. Toronto: House of Canada Ltd.
Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices 1997. 1998. United States Department of State:
Washington, DC.: United States Government Printing Office.
The Ottawa Citizen. 20 January
1997. "Ghana: Religious Tradition Condemns Girls to Life of
Servitude: Families Hand Virgins Over to Fetish Priests to Atone
for Crimes." (NEXIS)
Professor of Sociology and Anthropology,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. 9 February 1998. Telephone
interview.
Reuters. 1 April 1997. Vincent t'Sas.
"Ghana: Fetish Priests Free Slaves." (NEXIS)