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Photos of starving ‘witch’ toddler lead to massive donations and a glimmer of hope

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Danish aid worker Anja Ringgren Lovén and “Hope”, a Nigerian toddler who was accused of being a witch."Thousands of children are being accused of being witches and we've both seen torture of children, dead children and frightened children," she wrote. Photo: Tribune News Service/ Anja Ringgren Lovén.
The Washington Post

One of the potent photos shows an aid worker on a Nigerian dirt road, giving water to a sickly, abandoned toddler.

Others show rescuers wrapping the naked and emaciated boy in a blanket, driving him to a treatment centre and bathing him.

Accused of being a witch, the tiny boy had spent months trying to survive on the streets.

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And he wasn’t going to last much longer, Danish aid worker Anja Ringgren Lovén said.

The photo that inspired a huge influx of donations to care for the boy, dubbed “Hope”. Photo: Tribune News Service/ Anja Ringgren Lovén.
The photo that inspired a huge influx of donations to care for the boy, dubbed “Hope”. Photo: Tribune News Service/ Anja Ringgren Lovén.
“When we heard that the child was only 2 to 3 years old, we did not hesitate,” Lovén told Huffington Post UK. “A child that young cannot survive a long time alone on the streets. We immediately prepared a rescue mission.”
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At the time of his rescue, the skeletal child was in critical condition, said Lovén, founder of the African Children’s Aid Education and Development Foundation (ACAEDF).

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