The Manila Times

Kenyan ‘pastor’ charged for nearly 200 murders

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MALINDI, Kenya: A Kenyan court on Tuesday charged the leader of a starvation cult and dozens of suspected accomplice­s with murder over the deaths of nearly 200 people in a forest near the Indian Ocean.

Self-proclaimed pastor Paul Nthenge Mackenzie, who has already been charged with terrorism, manslaught­er, and child torture and cruelty, is alleged to have incited hundreds of his acolytes to starve to death in order to “meet Jesus.”

On Tuesday, Mackenzie and 29 other suspects pleaded not guilty to 191 counts of murder, according to court documents seen by Agence France-Presse (AFP).

A 31st suspect was deemed to lack the mental fitness to stand trial and ordered to return to the Malindi High Court in a month’s time.

The cult leader has pleaded not guilty to all the charges against him.

He was arrested last April after bodies were found in the Shakahola forest, with the grisly discoverie­s provoking horror across the world.

Autopsies revealed that the majority of the 429 victims had died of hunger.

But others, including children, appeared to have been strangled, beaten or suffocated.

The case, dubbed the “Shakahola forest massacre,” led the government to flag the need for tighter control of fringe denominati­ons.

Court documents have described the cult Mackenzie founded, the Good News Internatio­nal Ministries, as “an organized criminal group [which] engaged in organized criminal activities,” leading to the death of hundreds of followers.

Questions have been raised about how Mackenzie managed to evade law enforcemen­t despite a history of extremism and previous legal cases.

A Senate commission of inquiry reported last October that the father of seven had faced charges in 2017 for extreme preaching.

He was acquitted of charges of radicaliza­tion in 2017 for illegally providing school teaching after rejecting the formal educationa­l system that he claimed was not in line with the Bible.

In 2019, he was also accused of links to the death of two children believed to have been starved, suffocated and then buried in a shallow grave in Shakahola. He was released on bail pending trial.

There are more than 4,000 churches registered in the East African country of 53 million people, government figures show. It has struggled to regulate unscrupulo­us churches and cults that dabble in criminalit­y.

Previous efforts to regulate religious institutio­ns in Kenya have been fiercely opposed as attempts to undermine constituti­onal guarantees for the division of church and state.

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