A teenage girl chopped her
father's head clean off with a bush knife after he raped her in their home in
the highlands of Papua New Guinea.
Now residents of the village
have formed a protective ring around the 18-year-old, refusing to hand her over
to the police because they agreed her 'evil' father deserved to die.
A local church leader,
Pastor Lucas Kumi from the village of Rang in the Western Highlands, said the
entire community would refuse to allow the girl to be subjected to any official
investigation.
'The people and leaders in our area went
and saw the headless body of the father after the girl reported the incident to
them and explained why she had killed her father,' said Pastor Kumi.
He told the Post Courier
newspaper that the father, in his mid-40s, raped his daughter when they were
alone in their house after the mother and two other children from the family
went to visit relatives for the night.
'The father went to his daughter's room
in the night and raped her repeatedly.'The father wanted to rape his daughter
again in the morning and that was when the young girl picked up the bush knife
and chopped her father's head off,' said Pastor Kumi.We've all agreed that she
is free to stay in the community because the father deserved to die.
'The daughter did what she did because
of the trauma and the evil actions of her father, so that is why we have all
agreed that she remains in the community.'
He said a ring of protection
had been placed around the girl, who will be kept away from any official
investigation.
'The community have also
agreed not to conduct any formal burial service for the father.'
Crimes of rape, murder,
suspected witch killings and prostitution are rife throughout Papua New Guinea
and as a desperate attempt to stop the lawlessness the government recently
re-introduced the death penalty for serious offences.
But at the weekend the Post
Courier reported the results of an investigation into child prostitution, a
report, it said, that will 'make you cringe.'
Children aged between 13 and
16, said the paper, were selling sex in the nightclubs of the capital, Port
Moresby, five premises being reported to be engaged in the under-age
prostitution trade.
Three non-government
organisations have produced a report based on interviews with no less than 175
child sex workers.
'It's true - our girls, and
especial school girls, are being bought and sold for sex,' said one of the
investigators.
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