Fiji Sun

Kenya Cult Deaths: 21 Bodies Found in Investigat­ion into ‘Starvation Cult’

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Kenyan police have exhumed 21 bodies near the coastal town of Malindi, as they investigat­e a preacher said to have told followers to starve to death. Dead children were among those exhumed, and police said they expected to find even more bodies.

The shallow graves are in Shakahola forest, where 15 members of the Good News Internatio­nal Church were rescued last week.

Preacher Paul Mackenzie Nthenge is in custody, pending a court appearance.

State broadcaste­r KBC described him as a “cult leader”, and reported that 58 graves have so far been identified.

Mr Mackenzie has denied wrongdoing, but has been refused bail. He insists that he shut down his church in 2019.

He allegedly told followers to starve themselves in order to “meet Jesus”. The Kenyan daily The Standard said pathologis­ts will take DNA samples and conduct tests to determine whether the victims died of starvation.

Police arrested Mr Mackenzie on 15 April after discoverin­g the bodies of four people suspected of having starved themselves to death.

Victor Kaudo of the Malindi Social Justice Centre told Citizen TV “when we are in this forest and come to an area where we see a big and tall cross, we know that means more than five people are buried there”.

The preacher allegedly named three villages Nazareth, Bethlehem

and Judea and baptised followers in ponds before telling them to fast, The Standard reports.

Kenya is a religious country and

there have been previous cases of people being lured into dangerous, unregulate­d churches or cults.

 ?? ?? Police stepped up the exhumation­s on Saturday in Shakahola forest.
Police stepped up the exhumation­s on Saturday in Shakahola forest.

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