The Post-Courier newspaper said police were present during the killings last week but were outnumbered by an angry mob and could do nothing to prevent the grisly deaths.
"We were helpless.
We could not do anything," Bougainville police inspector Herman Birengka
told the paper, saying his officers were threatened when they tried to
negotiate the women's release.
According to Birengka,
who described the murders as "barbaric and senseless," the women were
taken captive last Tuesday by relatives of a former school teacher who died
recently.
"The two women were
rounded up and taken to Lopele village after they were suspected of practising
sorcery and blamed for the death of the former teacher, who was from Lopele
village," he said.
They were tortured for
three days, suffering knife and axe wounds, before being beheaded in front of
the police who had been sent to the village to mediate, the report said.
The killings come just
days after another report that six women accused of sorcery were tortured with
hot irons in an Easter "sacrifice" in the Southern Highlands.
Last month, a woman
accused of sorcery was stripped naked and burned to death by a mob, with
Amnesty International stepping up calls for an end to sorcery-related violence
in Papua New Guinea.
Amnesty has urged the
government to stamp out the practice in the Pacific nation where there is a
widespread belief in sorcery and where many people do not accept natural causes
as an explanation for misfortune and death.
There have been several
other cases of witchcraft and cannibalism in PNG in recent years, with a man
reportedly found eating his screaming, newborn son during a sorcery initiation
ceremony in 2011.
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