Daily Mail

Baptist minister: Hand me £9,000 and I’ll help you to get care home job

- By Tom Kelly and Isaan Khan

HIS mission, he proclaims, is to establish God’s kingdom on earth. In his impassione­d sermons at the packed Pentecost Baptist Church in Liverpool, Dr Rev Philip Oyewale routinely calls for his flock to praise and honour their salvation Jesus.

Dressed in a bright tailored suit with a gold watch, he declares ‘Hallelujah, praise the Lord’, prompting worshipper­s to respond in unison.

But when our undercover reporter arrived to see Mr Oyewale at his church, it was used for a less spiritual purpose.

Sitting in his vestry, a university graduation photo behind him, he offered to charge a Nigerian undercover reporter £9,000 to help her obtain Home Office sponsorshi­p for a job in a UK care home.

Our investigat­ion came after learning that his company, Charis Recruits, had been suspended from the Home Office migrant sponsorshi­p scheme in February last year because it was suspected of ‘supplying sponsored workers as labour’. It was said to have sponsored 37 migrants from July 2022 to February 2023 in an operation suspected of making over £1million.

Despite this, whistleblo­wers told the Mail, Mr Oyewale was still offering to help migrants get sponsorshi­p.

And when the undercover reporter posing as a overseas student looking for full-time work approached the minister, he told her he could help her get a Certificat­e of Sponsorshi­p – required for a work visa – in just three days.

He said that after the payment he would introduce her to someone who would help her and promised a ‘100 per cent’ success rate and said there would be no problems with the Home Office.

‘There’s nothing to worry about. I can assure you of that.’ Pointing at himself, he added: ‘That’s the assurance I personally can give you.’

The work would be domiciliar­y

care – supporting a disabled or elderly person in their own home – in Newcastle or Middlesbro­ugh, he said.

The only question he asked about suitabilit­y for the job was if our applicant had a car.

He declined to say what the wage would be, simply saying: ‘You will be paid. We have more than enough hours. You will work until you say you are tired.’ He refused to say how many people he had previously

helped. He said once the £9,000 had been paid, he would ‘introduce’ her to the person with the job.

Mr Oyewale, 47, is a registered minister with the Baptist Union which represents Baptist churches in England and Wales. He has several social media sites with thousands of followers where he posts videos promoting church events.

Charis Recruits said it would investigat­e the Mail’s allegation­s, but said because Mr Oyewale had resigned as a director of the company three months after its Home Office licence was revoked, he was ‘no longer able to make decisions’ for the firm.

The company declined to answer subsequent questions about why Mr Oyewale’s mobile number remained on the contacts section of the company website and why the email Charis Recruits sent to the Mail listed Philip Oyewale as the company’s ‘registered manager’ at the bottom.

Mr Oyewale told the Mail he only gave advice to those who needed help getting sponsorshi­p and never benefited financiall­y. The undercover reporter did not pay the £9,000 for which he asked.

He added: ‘Any advice I gave, even prior to my resignatio­n from Charis Recruits Ltd, was solely intended to help them advance and be able to earn a respectabl­e livelihood while lawfully remaining in the UK.’

 ?? ?? Sermons: Philip Oyewale of the Pentecost Baptist Church
Sermons: Philip Oyewale of the Pentecost Baptist Church
 ?? ?? Offer: Mr Oyewale filmed by Mail’s undercover reporter
Offer: Mr Oyewale filmed by Mail’s undercover reporter

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