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  • 26
    Apr
    2013
    3:47am, EDT

    Baby girl sacrificed on bonfire after sect leader says tot is the Antichrist, Chile cops say

    AP

    Ramon Gustavo Castillo Gaete, 36, is the alleged leader of a 12-member sect that is accused of burning a baby alive.

    SANTIAGO, Chile -- Chilean police on Thursday arrested four people accused of burning a baby alive in a ritual because the leader of the sect believed that the end of the world was near and that the child was the Antichrist.

    The 3-day-old baby was taken to a hill in the town of Colliguay near the Chilean port of Valparaiso on Nov. 21 and was thrown into a bonfire. The baby's mother, 25-year-old Natalia Guerra, had allegedly approved the sacrifice and was among those arrested.

    "The baby was naked. They strapped tape around her mouth to keep her from screaming. Then they placed her on a board. After calling on the spirits they threw her on the bonfire alive," said Miguel Ampuero, of the Police investigative Unit, Chile's equivalent of the FBI.

    AP

    Investigators search for evidence in a house that was used to perform rites by a sect in Colliguay, Chile.

    Authorities said the 12-member sect was formed in 2005 and was led by Ramon Gustavo Castillo Gaete, 36, who remains at large.

    "Everyone in this sect was a professional," Ampuero said. "We have someone who was a veterinarian and who worked as a flight attendant, we have a filmmaker, a draftsman. Everyone has a university degree. "

    Police said Castillo Gaete, the ringleader, was last seen traveling to Peru to buy ayahuasca, a hallucinogenic brew plant that he used to control the members of the rite.

    The Associated Press

    903 comments

    This has to be the most disgusting thing I have ever read. What are the universities in Chile teaching their students? They all had degrees. Those who did this are just savages. May this precious baby rest in peace in heaven.

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  • 18
    May
    2012
    11:39am, EDT

    Thai police arrest man after babies' bodies found roasted, wrapped in gold leaf

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Thai police arrested a British man Friday after discovering six human babies which had been roasted and wrapped in gold leaf in preparation for a type of black magic ritual, according to reports.

    Police said Friday that they found the corpses packed into suitcases in Bangkok's Chinatown on Thursday, the AFP news agency reported. Chow Hok Kuen, a British citizen born in Hong Kong of Taiwanese parents, was being held for possession of human remains.



    Follow @msnbc_world

    Kuen had reportedly bought the corpses several days before for 200,000 baht ($6,400) and planned to smuggle them into Taiwan. It was not reported where he bought them, but police speculated it was in Thailand.

    Although some media reports indicated that the bodies were fetuses, Wiwat Kumchumnan of Bangkok police's children and women protection unit told Reuters that the bodies were of children "between the ages of two and seven months. Some were found covered in gold leaf." 

    2,000 fetuses discovered at Bangkok temple

    Kamchamnan told the AFP that Kuen planned to sell the corpses to "clients who believe they will make them lucky and rich." 

    He faces a fine of 2,000 baht ($64) and up to one year in prison.

    Watch world news videos on msnbc.com

    Kuen was staying at a hotel in Khao San Road, Bangkok's backpacker area, but that the bodies were found in a separate hotel.

    Police had received a tip-off that infant corpses were being offered to wealthy clients through a website advertising black magic services. 

    Black magic rituals are still practiced in Thailand, where street-side fortune tellers offer ceremonies to reverse bad luck. According to reports, the ritual of enshrining fetuses is practiced in some Chinese communities.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    84 comments

    He faces a fine of 2,000 baht ($64) and up to one year in prison. Are you effing kidding me !?!?!? Someone kill this guy! Now!

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    Explore related topics: british, thailand, baby, black-magic, ritual, featured, fetus, foetus
  • 13
    Dec
    2011
    1:36pm, EST

    Religious slaughtering practices under fire in the Netherlands

    Peter Dejong / AP

    A ritually-slaughtered lamb is delivered at a halal butcher shop on the market in The Hague, Netherlands, Tuesday Dec. 13.

    By TOBY STERLING, Associated Press

    AMSTERDAM -- Political support for a proposed ban on slaughtering animals without stunning them first appeared to crumble Tuesday as the Dutch senate debated legislation that Muslim and Jewish groups say violates their religious rights.

    The ban — proposed by an animal rights party and widely supported by Dutch voters — passed Parliament's lower house by a 116-30 margin in June, raising an international outcry from religious groups.


    Although senators will not vote until Dec. 20, it appeared from Tuesday's debate that several parties that initially backed the ban in parliament — including the Netherlands' two largest — have changed their mind.

    If the Netherlands does outlaw the slaughtering practices that make meat kosher for Jews or halal for Muslims, it will be the second country after New Zealand to do so in recent years. It would join Switzerland, the Scandinavian and Baltic countries, whose bans are mostly traceable to pre-World War II anti-Semitism.

    Speaking first, Labor senator Nico Schrijver said his party now has "many questions" about the bill, including asking why it "so specifically aims its arrows at the rather small number of ritual slaughterers and why not large-scale industrial slaughter, which involves 500 million animals per year?"

    "It seems to me that there may be much more effective, and less far-reaching methods that achieve the same goal" of improving animal welfare, Schrijver said, citing better education for slaughterers and better conditions in slaughterhouses.

    Muslims, mostly immigrants from Turkey and Morocco, represent about a million of the 16 million Dutch population. The once-strong Jewish community numbers around 50,000 after most were deported and killed by the Nazis during World War II.

    In both religions, tradition prescribes that animals' throats be cut swiftly with a razor-sharp knife while they are still conscious, so that they bleed to death quickly.

    Support for the ban comes both from left-leaning voters who see this technique as inhumane, and from social conservatives who see it as foreign and barbaric.

    Outside the debate, Esther Ouwehand of the tiny Party for the Animals, which proposed the ban, said it was unjust to inflict "extra suffering on animals to satisfy religious opinion."

    The ban's most influential backer has been the Netherlands' anti-Islam Freedom Party.

    "Do we want such practices in a civilized country as ours?" asked Freedom senator Marjolein Faber, after describing a worst-case scenario of a panicked animal taking six minutes to lose consciousness after a botched ritual slaughter.

    The Royal Dutch Veterinary Association says it believes slaughtering cattle in particular while still conscious inflicts unnecessary suffering.

    But Moshe Kantor, President of the European Jewish Congress, said there is "no scientific evidence" that religious slaughter, performed properly, is more painful for animals than stunning.

    He said the law should be voted down in the name of freedom of religion.

    "If this law is passed in a country known for its tolerant and open society, it could result in a very dangerous domino effect that could spread to other parts of Europe," he said.

    Among the two parties in the Netherlands' governing coalition, the Christian Democrats opposed the ban from the beginning out of concern for the rights of religious minorities.

    The pro-business VVD party, the country's largest, also now appears unlikely to support the ban.

    VVD senator Sybe Schaap slammed the bill for "ethical absolutism" and said offering incentives for slaughterhouses to improve their practices would have a more positive effect than a ban.

    The Dutch undersecretary for Economic Affairs Henk Blekers has said the Cabinet will only take a position on the bill after the Senate vote.

    24 comments

    http://oukosher.org/index.php/common/article/setting_the_record_straight_on_kosher_slaughter/ Kosher mammals and birds are slaughtered by a special procedure called shechitah, in which the animal's throat is quickly, precisely and painlessly cut with a sharp, perfectly smooth knife (called a chalaf) …

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    Explore related topics: netherlands, muslims, meat, ban, jews, ritual, halal, kosher, slaughtering

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