Criminal gangs nicknamed "albino hunters", armed with machetes, 
knives and axes are striking fear into people living with albinism in 
Malawi, abducting and often killing their victims in broad daylight and 
in the dead of night, prompting police to announce a shoot-to-kill 
policy.
The latest victim of the brutal attacks is a nine-year
 old boy with albinism from Malawi's eastern district of Machinga. His 
mother Edna Cedrick tried to rescue her son Brian when two attackers abducted 
him early in March 2016.
A police officer from Machinga district, Isaac 
Ndala, confirmed the abduction, adding that the kidnappers injured the 
boy's mother. The abduction happened while her husband was away 
on a fishing errand at the nearby Lake Chilwa.
According
 to South Malawi News, the mutilated body of the boy has been found. His
 head and other parts of his body were cut off (pictured). Police have arrested a 
22-year-old man for taking part in the gruesome murder.
The audacious kidnapping is not an isolated case, as abductions, 
attempted killings and brutal murders have prompted some police 
authorities to brand albinos an "endangered species" in Malawi.
According
 to the police, by now about 50 criminal offences have been committed 
against albinos and the number might even be higher than as some 
incidents may not have been reported to police.
"The latest statistics we have are of last year, 2015," Malawi police spokesperson Nicholas Gondwa told News24.
"Over
 30 criminal cases were reported that included killings, abductions, and
 being found with bones of persons with albinism. Just imagine, there 
are even some daredevils who go to cemeteries to dig graves where people
 with albinism were buried. All that is done in the name of hunting for 
the body parts or bones of albinos," he said.
Sources: News 25 and South Malawi News