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Doctors Accused of Being Vampires Attacked in Malawi

The vibrant culture of Malawi meets 21st-century technology.

IN THE AFRICAN country of Malawi, doctors are being attacked by mobs who believe the doctors are vampires, using their stethoscopes to suck blood.

Mobs have killed nine people accused of being vampires, as fear sweeps Malawi. A doctors’ group says medical staff have been beaten for carrying stethoscopes. Ambulances have also been attacked while taking people to hospital, the group says. A spokesman described the situation as “mass hysteria” caused by delusional individuals.

Doctors in Malawi have been beaten for carrying stethoscopes by vigilante mobs who believe they are vampires using the instruments to suck blood. Medics have also been robbed and had their vehicles smashed, while ambulances have been attacked as patients were taken to hospital, a doctors’ association said.

The Society of Medical Doctors in Malawi said a case of ‘mass hysteria’ sweeping the south of the country has led thousands of people to believe there are vampires in their midst. Nine people have been beaten to death after being accused of being a vampire, while 124 have been arrested for carrying out the attacks.

In a statement, society president Dr Amos Salimanda Nyaka said: ‘We are disturbed by the reports of thuggery that has resulted into some health workers being attacked for carrying a stethoscope.

‘Some have had unfortunate incidences of having their vehicles smashed, and in others having their possessions taken off them for being suspected of being blood suckers, and or in pursuit of the non-existent suckers.

‘Some ambulances have also been attacked whilst being used to ferry patients to and or from hospital.

‘This is despicable and we condemn all these and all similar acts of barbarism on innocent people unreservedly and in the strongest language possible.

‘No health worker can suck blood with a stethoscope.’

Dr Nyaka added that there is ‘no evidence’ the vampires are real, and instead blamed the situation on ‘Shared Delusion Disorder’.

He said, ‘This is when a dominant individual who is deluded and can have those following him believe and internalize his delusions. Shared delusion is usually confined to a locality.

‘In view of the magnitude of the problem in that it is affecting many districts and the readiness of many Malawians to internalize these beliefs this presentation would constitute that of mass hysteria.

‘It is the considered view of the Society that such blood suckers do not exist. This is purely mass hysteria.’

The attacks started in mid-September but alarm has grown in recent weeks as they spread to Blantyre, the second-largest city in the country.

Malawi is one of the world’s poorest nations, and belief in witchcraft is widespread.

Police arrested 124 people on Friday last week after two men were beaten to death in Blantyre, accused of trying to obtain human blood for voodoo rituals.

‘One person was burned and another stoned to death by angry mobs in incidents on Thursday for being suspected to be blood suckers,’ police spokesman Ramsy Mushani said.

The latest killings took place outside Blantyre, the country’s commercial capital, where angry mobs clashed with police and blocked main roads to protest against the alleged vampire threat.

The country’s police chief said the 124 arrests had been made in a ‘coordinated operation’.

As public anger has grown, the UN — which is involved in food aid and agricultural programmes — pulled its workers out some areas for safety reasons.

In a report earlier this month, the UN said it had suspended all visits to the affected areas because the situation was ‘unstable and volatile’.

Rumours of vampires allegedly originated from Mozambique and spread across the border to the Malawian districts of Mulanje and Phalombe, according to the UN. President Peter Mutharika last week vowed to investigate the killings and the vampire rumours.

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Source: Nigerian Medicals

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A Swedish Man
A Swedish Man
19 December, 2017 1:10 pm

To be fair, having your blood drained by a witch doctor for voodoo or muti rituals is probably a very real risk in Africa.

Andrew
Andrew
Reply to  A Swedish Man
14 July, 2023 4:10 pm

It’s mostly in Tanzania, Burundi and South Africa that albinos (and Caucasians, too) are killed and their blood, bones and other body parts are used for their magical powers. Lately another practice of ritual child sacrifice called muti has been making headlines, as Africans kill other Africans for the same purpose, to make ritual medicine to cure illness, enhance sexual virility, make you successful in life, in other words to make you healthy and wealthy, and all you have to do is murder your next door neighbor, even if he’s a friend of the family. https://www.thescarechamber.com/muti-ritual-sacrifice-as-medicine/ Put it this way, these people believe that they can steal your mojo. Even if it were scientifically possible, would you do it? Would you take somebody’s life if it could be empirically proven… Read more »