A sickening stench has wafted of late across a busy road in Bangui that runs alongside the Central African Republic's biggest waterway.
In the reeds growing on the bank of the Ubangui River, fishermen have found grossly mutilated corpses wrapped in sackcloth.
In just one week last month, three bodies -- all handcuffed and beheaded -- were found, humanitarian sources have told AFP. Others have had organs sliced out.
Gruesome discoveries are not uncommon in this poor landlocked state, where violence is part of life's daily backdrop.
But whenever corpses are fished out of the murky Ubangui, the "talimbi" — crocodile men — are often the prime suspects.
Some say the talimbi are humans who metamorphose into reptiles. Others believe they are witchcraft practitioners, able to wield powers without ever leaving the river bank.
Either way, the talimbi exercise a decades-long grip on the local mind. The way they are deemed to kill is always the same: they lure their victims below the surface of the river and kill them in punishment for some perceived transgression.
Fear of the talimbi is deeply rooted among residents of Bangui, the CAR capital, including people who have been educated abroad.
Myth as social 'regulator'
People believe that the mutilations found on recovered bodies are clues to the purported offence.
"A tongue is torn out to punish those who talk too much," says a Bangui fisherman.
"If the penis is cut off, the man was an adulterer. The ears are for those who didn't listen."
Anthropologist Alexandra Cimpric, a specialist in modern African witchcraft, says the superstition is meant to dissuade unacceptable conduct -- it acts "like a regulator of the norms of good behaviour and morality."
The judicial system in the CAR is woefully deficient in a nation long dogged by poverty and corruption.
In contrast, the talimbi are held to have their own tribunals in which people cannot be falsely accused.
"Whoever the talimbi is will verify if what you say is true," says Jean-Claude Beta, chairman of the Association of Tradipractitioners, whose members are traditional healers initiated into the secrets of the spirit world.
To find out, a stick or a plant is thrown into the water. If it floats, the accusation is a lie.
But if it sinks, the talimbi passes sentence and the victim is mystically summoned to the riverside.
"When you are called, you will be drawn to the water, even if you are 100 kilometres (60 miles) away," Beta says.
"There's no remedy. You are going to die."
No-one, it is believed, falls victim to the talimbi without having first been ritually denounced.
But fear of the crocodile men is so entrenched that it offers an easy solution for murderers, say some.
"It's enough to throw a corpse into the river and the story about the talimbi shields those responsible," says Joseph Bindoumi, chairman of the Centrafrican League of Human Rights and a former public prosecutor.
"Investigations are not carried out with a desire to uncover the truth."
One of the latest victims found i