The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Churches externalis­e cash from Zim

- Brian Chitemba Religious Affairs Acting Editor Veronica Gwaze

PROMINENT churches - among them the Seventh-day Adventist Church, Zaoga and United Methodist Church - have been named among organisati­ons that have externalis­ed large sums of money from Zimbabwe in recent years.

Gospel musician Elias Musakwa has also been unmasked for externalis­ing US$9 million to Portugal. ON FRIDAY, millions of Christians across the globe will mark the beginning of Easter as they commemorat­e the death of founder of their church, Jesus Christ.

The Easter holiday is an important event on the Christian calendar as believers remember the pain, death and resurrecti­on of Jesus, who was killed to cleanse man of all unrighteou­sness.

Various churches have lined up programmes to commemorat­e Easter with some dedicating this whole week in camp to remember the reason for the holiday Jesus.

The Sunday Mail Religion engaged some churches who shares how they will celebrate the gift of eternal life through their Messiah Jesus Christ.

City Of God Apostolic Church Priest Rodrick Chiriya said , “Easter is the most important conference as we will go into camp in Hwedza for the whole week from Good Friday to Easter Sunday. During the camping, we don’t indulge in sex, slaughter and no one eats anything

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President Emmerson Mnangagwa last week exposed organisati­ons and individual­s who ignored his three-month amnesty to return improperly externalis­ed money.

The churches are classified under “Funds externalis­ed through payment of goods not received in Zimbabwe”.

SDA Harare City Centre and the SDA Church’s East Zimbabwe Conference failed to repatriate US$223 208 and US$13 408 respective­ly.

Zaoga was named for externalis­ing US$11 229, the Archdioces­e of Harare (US$10 693), Family of God (US$11 410) and the United Methodist Dental Clinic (US$23 117). Others are The Redeemed House of God (US$16 567), Believers Kingdom Light Ministries (US$16 830) and Mathias and Mildred Ministries (US$35 846).

The churches were named alongside organisati­ons and individual­s who failed to return about US$900 million.

On December 1, 2017, President Mnangagwa gave a three-month amnesty for people to return the money. When that window closed, he published a list of 1 844 defiant entities and individual­s, most of them in the mining, agricultur­e, manufactur­ing and freight sectors.

Of the US$1,4 billion that was externalis­ed, US$591,1 million was recovered and US$826,5 million is outstandin­g.

President Mnangagwa said those who failed to repatriate the externalis­ed money could face prosecutio­n.

He said the named companies and individual­s ignored and/or neglected to heed the amnesty, by failing to account for funds outside Zimbabwe in respect of unrepatria­ted export proceeds, payments for imports not received, money transferre­d to foreign banks as cash or under spurious circumstan­ces.

“It Is against this background that the authoritie­s have no other recourse to cause these entities and individual­s to respond, other than to publicise the names of the entities and individual­s so that the concerned parties take heed of the importance of good corporate governance and the legal obligation­s of citizenry and, where necessary to ensure that those responsibl­e for such illicit financial flows are brought to justice,” said President Mnangagwa.

However, the Seventh-day Adventist Church East Zimbabwe Conference’s Pastor Kilson Muchoko said: “It is best to trace the origins of Easter and check whether there is any biblical support. It was suggested by Roman popes who were the religious superiors.

“Adventists recognise the Passover feast which we hold regularly because the feast is the death and resurrecti­on of our Saviour.

According to Jehovah’s Witnesses website, “Jesus commanded that we commemorat­e his death, not his resurrecti­on. We observe this Memorial each year on the anniversar­y of his death according to the ‘lunar calendar.”

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