ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 5月7日 22時58分


One day in October 2015, Electerio João’s brother-in-law asked him to come “work and earn money.” Electerio, who was 22, was living with his mother in a small mud-brick house in a village in northern Mozambique. He needed the money. But he soon realized that he was going to be the source of cash, not labor. His brother-in-law, working with 3 friends, tied up Electerio and took him to the side of a main road. Their plan was to sell him for his body parts. That’s because Electerio has #albinism, a superstition in #Mozambique holds that albino body parts bring good luck. A person with albinism can be worth as much as $75,000. Since the end of 2014, dozens of albinos in Mozambique have been kidnapped or murdered, often by family members. Electerio made it out, but he’s still afraid — ”as were all of the albinos and their families I spoke with and photographed in Mozambique and Malawi,” @danirodriguesphoto writes in #NYTOpinion. Visit the link in our profile to see more of his photos.


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