Friday, February 12, 2010

Nepal police say 4 arrested over child sacrifice

I keep telling people that human sacrifice never went away, that it is more prominent than ever (it just went underground). I have a blog dedicated to this and cannibalism (it went underground as well). What part of 'underworld' don't people understand? We're living in a demon-run world (from inter dimensional planes and from demons dressed in flesh suits called psychopaths) and I know I'm not the only one who sees this! I used to talk to one of the demonic flesh suits! He told me that he ate human flesh twice a week! What I keep trying to tell people is that you can't have cannibalism without some kind of human sacrifice! This world is getting more evil all the time!

http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/asia/168271/nepal-police-say-4-arrested-over-child-sacrifice

Agence France-Presse
Fri, 12 Feb 2010 03:54 EST


Nepali police said Thursday they had arrested four people in connection with the death of an eight-year-old girl believed to have been killed in a human sacrifice.

Police said the child's throat had been slit and her body pierced with a sharp weapon. Local media reported her blood was found inside a brick kiln along with religious offerings of money and food.

"The circumstances of the killing in early December suggest the girl was sacrificed," local police official Narhari Adhikari told AFP from Rupandehi district in the south of Nepal.

"We have arrested four people including the owner of the brick kiln on charges of murder.

"Two of those arrested confessed they killed the girl as an offering to the gods to bring good fortune to the business," he added.

Mainly Hindu Nepal is deeply traditional and religious rituals are a part of everyday life in the impoverished country. Around 80 percent of the 27 million-strong population are Hindu.

Nepal outlawed human sacrifices in 1780 but experts say it is still practised by some communities in poor rural areas.

"Some people still believe sacrificing human beings will appease the gods, improve their fortunes and raise their social status," said Chunda Bajracharya, professor of cultural studies at Kathmandu's Tribhuvan University.