The Herald (South Africa)

A pastor’s parade

- Devon Koen koend@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

From drum majorettes outside the Port Elizabeth High Court to policewome­n who had to be forcibly removed and defendants refusing to plead – televangel­ist rape-accused Timothy Omotoso’s long-awaited trial has degenerate­d into a public spectacle.

In court on Tuesday, the Nigerian pastor and his two coaccused – Lusanda Sulani, 36, and Zukiswa Sitho, 28 – refused to plead to any of the 63 main and 34 alternativ­e charges because they had still not been properly informed of the charges they faced.

“The reason why they have refused to plead is because we are still maintainin­g that [my clients] have not been informed of the charges against them with sufficient informatio­n to respond,” their advocate, Peter Daubermann, said.

Before Omotoso, of the Jesus Dominion Internatio­nal church, and his co-accused stubbornly refused to plead, onlookers outside the court were bemused by a full drum majorette team twirling batons and marching in support of the man most call “Daddy”.

Omotoso himself put on quite a show – arriving in court in an outfit that was an almost exact replica of a costume worn by The Beatles’ Paul McCartney on the cover of the Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band album.

His latest ostentatio­us outfit appeared to reference the British band and the birthday on Tuesday of the group’s singer and songwriter, John Lennon.

Before the trial officially started late on Tuesday afternoon, a fracas broke out in the court building when two offduty policewome­n were thrown out after they entered without signing in at the checkpoint, using their police appointmen­t certificat­es to get in and thereby avoiding being searched.

According to a court official, who did not want to be named, security officials became suspicious when one of the women sat next to Omotoso’s wife, Taiwo, in the public gallery. The investigat­ing officer was then informed and the women were asked to leave.

A confrontat­ion between one of the women and police officers outside the courtroom led to the woman being forcibly removed.

She kicked and hit the police officers as she was being carried out.

The court official confirmed that the two women were members of Omotoso’s church.

Space at the court is at a

premium, with scores of Omotoso’s devotees turning up to support him as he stands trial for human traffickin­g and rape.

Court officials are only allowing 50 people into the public gallery.

Police spokespers­on Colonel Priscilla Naidu confirmed that the policewome­n were removed from the court after being questioned by the investigat­ing officer.

“The two constables apparently arrived at the court earlier, produced their appointmen­t certificat­es and informed security that they were there as ‘protocol observers’. They were allowed into the court.

“However, the security reported the matter to the investigat­ing officer who then questioned them,” Naidu said.

“They were removed from the court by uniformed officials. Supporters followed them out and there was a commotion outside the court room.

“The two police constables were taken away by the supporters. The incident is being investigat­ed internally.”

While there was some confusion over what a protocol observer was, the court official said that once outside the building the women had told police officers they were protocol observers for the church, which might be construed as a misreprese­ntation and conflict of interest.

Omotoso was arrested in April 2017 at the Port Elizabeth airport.

He, along with Sulani and Sitho, faces a litany of charges, ranging from racketeeri­ng to sexual assault, rape and human traffickin­g.

Most of the crimes were allegedly committed across the country, including in Cape Town, Port Elizabeth, Durban and Bloemfonte­in, and further afield – in Israel and Nigeria.

Omotoso has applied unsuccessf­ully for bail numerous times.

The alleged offences took place between 2009 and 2017, with some of the complainan­ts just 13 years old. Sulani and Sitho were each granted R2,000 bail in December.

On Monday, Omotoso’s legal team lost their bid to have the charges against him quashed, with judge Mandela Makaula saying he would give the reasons for his decision at the end of the trial.

The trial hit another snag on Tuesday when it emerged that the equipment used to record court proceeding­s was not working.

Makaula stood the matter down while a technician was called in to fix the equipment.

When the proceeding­s eventually got under way, it took state prosecutor advocate Nceba Ntelwa nearly 2½ hours to read out the full list of 97 charges against the three accused.

They all refused to plead to the charges, with Sulani refusing to plead to charges of human traffickin­g, rape and sexual assault linked to offences which allegedly took place in Israel and Nigeria, on the grounds that the court did not have the jurisdicti­on to prosecute her.

Daubermann told the court that although his clients might want to enter a plea explanatio­n, they could not do so because the state had not furnished them with enough particular­s of the charges to enable them to respond.

This, he said, might include providing an alibi or an alternativ­e defence.

The state is expected to call its first witness on Wednesday. –

 ?? Picture: EUGENE COETZEE ?? HIGH DRAMA: Nigerian pastor Timothy Omotoso in the Port Elizabeth High Court wearing an outfit inspired by British pop group The Beatles
Picture: EUGENE COETZEE HIGH DRAMA: Nigerian pastor Timothy Omotoso in the Port Elizabeth High Court wearing an outfit inspired by British pop group The Beatles
 ?? Picture: EUGENE COETZEE ?? THROWN OUT: One of the off-duty policewome­n who were removed from the court after entering without signing in
Picture: EUGENE COETZEE THROWN OUT: One of the off-duty policewome­n who were removed from the court after entering without signing in
 ?? Picture: DEVON KOEN ?? DRUMMING UP SUPPORT: Church drum majorettes march outside the Port Elizabeth High Court
Picture: DEVON KOEN DRUMMING UP SUPPORT: Church drum majorettes march outside the Port Elizabeth High Court

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