‘Satanic’ sect kills seven people in Panama

Indigenous group tortured, burned and hacked with machetes by lay preachers

Panamanian paramedics carrying one of the 15 people rescued from a religious sect on a stretcher in Santiago, Veraguas province, Panama on Wednesday. Photograph: TVN Noticias/Getty Images
Panamanian paramedics carrying one of the 15 people rescued from a religious sect on a stretcher in Santiago, Veraguas province, Panama on Wednesday. Photograph: TVN Noticias/Getty Images

A "satanic" sect has killed seven people and police have freed 14 others following a violent ritual in a jungle community in Panama.

Indigenous residents were rounded up by lay preachers before being tortured, beaten, burned and hacked with machetes to make them “repent their sins”, authorities said on Thursday.

Police said they had freed 14 members of the Ngabe Bugle indigenous group, including two pregnant women and children, who had been tied up and beaten with wooden cudgels and Bibles.

Authorities were alerted to the violence by three villagers from the Caribbean coast community who escaped and made their way to a local hospital for treatment.

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Investigators found an improvised “church” at a ranch where the little-known religious sect known as The New Light of God was operating.

“They were performing a ritual inside the structure. In that ritual, there were people being held against their will, being mistreated,” prosecutor Rafael Baloyes said.

“All of these rites were aimed at killing them if they did not repent their sins,” he said.

“There was a naked person, a woman,” inside the building, where investigators found machetes, knives and a ritually sacrificed goat, he added.

The rites had been going since Saturday when one of the church members had a vision.

“One of them said God had given them a message,” Mr Baloyes said.

About 1.5km from the church building, authorities found a freshly dug grave with the corpses of six children and one adult.

The dead included five children as young as a year old, their pregnant mother and a 17-year-old female neighbour.

Ngabe Bugle zone leader Ricardo Miranda called the sect “satanic” and said it went against the region’s Christian beliefs.

The sect had been operating locally for about three months and its beliefs and affiliations were not known.

The Ngabe Bugle are Panama’s largest indigenous group and suffer from high rates of poverty and illiteracy.–PA