Technology

Inside the place where people are hunted for body parts used for ‘magic charms’

2025-11-24 11:29
776 views
Inside the place where people are hunted for body parts used for ‘magic charms’

'They killed my child and now there is just silence,' Sallay Kalokoh said.

Inside the place where people are hunted for body parts used for ‘magic charms’ Sarah Hooper Sarah Hooper Published November 24, 2025 11:29am Updated November 24, 2025 11:35am Share this article via whatsappShare this article via xCopy the link to this article.Link is copiedShare this article via facebook Comment now Comments A man crosses a street as he talks on the phone at Dove Cot Market in Freetown, on May 1, 2025. (Photo by PATRICK MEINHARDT / AFP) (Photo by PATRICK MEINHARDT/AFP via Getty Images) Killings related to black magic are reportedly on the rise (Picture: AFP)

Four years ago in central Sierra Leone, 11-year-old Papayo Kalokoh went to sell fish at the market.

Two weeks later, his mutilated body was discovered at the bottom of a well, with his vital organs, eyes and one arm removed as part of a black magic ritual.

His mum, Sallay, told BBC Africa: ‘They killed my child and now there is just silence.

‘We always tell our children to be careful. If you are selling, don’t go to a corner or take gifts from strangers. It happens frequently in this country.’

Black magic killings are on the rise in the West African country, where many believe human body parts can make charms more powerful.

Even with evidence and mutilated bodies, police don’t confirm these murders as ‘ritual killings’, it’s been found – the country is so underresourced that it’s hard to track down the people behind the killings.

A view overlooking the rooftops of homemade buildings using various materials at an informal settlement in Freetown, Sierra Leone. One black magic user said he worked with ‘big, big’ politicans in Africa (Picture: Getty)

BBC Africa went undercover in Sierra Leone to meet with a juju practitioner, who bragged about how busy his shrine was.

‘I was working with some big, big politicians in Guinea, Senegal and Nigeria. We have our team. Sometimes during election time, at night, this place is full of people,’ he bragged.

He also showed off a human skull and showed the undercover reporter where he hangs human body parts.

When the reporter asked how much a limb from a woman would be, the man said it would cost around £2,500.

Tracking down missing and murdered people who are unwittingly part of this human trade is difficult as well, given that ritual murders aren’t recorded as a specific type of murder.

The true number of victims may not be fully known.

Freetown, SierraLeone - June 15: Little girl in dirty street of Bomeh Village on June 15, 2021 in Freetown, Sierra Leone. The poorest of the poor have started to settle on the waste mountains of the city. They live over poisonous stifles and with spoiled water. (Photo by Ute Grabowsky/Photothek via Getty Images) People both young and old have been snatched and killed (Picture: Getty)

Other countries have also dealt with murders related to black magic. Last year, a daughter shared how she feared a ‘massive cover-up’ following her parents’ abduction and murder in South Africa.

Tony and Gillian Dinnis’s body parts were sold to a witch doctor in South Africa, according to a police file.

More Trending

The couple, 73 and 78, were last seen on their remote farm in Middlerus, KwaZulu-Natal, in 2023.

Days later, their children began receiving messages in Zulu demanding an £85,000 ransom be paid into their mum’s bank account to secure their safe release.

One police officer speculated that when the ransom payment was not made, they were dismembered and their body parts sold as ‘muti’.

Body parts are sometimes used for medicinal – ‘muti’ – purposes, with ‘potions’ sold to customers to bring wealth or good luck or ward off ill-health.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at [email protected].

For more stories like this, check our news page.

Comment now Comments Add Metro as a Preferred Source on Google Add as preferred source Breaking News

Never miss the biggest stories with breaking news alerts in your inbox.

Email I agree to receive newsletters from Metro I agree to receive newsletters from Metro Sign UpSign Up

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Your information will be used in line with our Privacy Policy