Mail & Guardian

‘It’s an attack on Christiani­ty’

Soweto congregant­s says police invaded their church and fired shots; Jo’burg metro police say they used pepper fog to disperse the crowd

- Oupa Nkosi

‘Have you come to do Marikana here? If it has become a crime to pray then we are committing a crime” said Pastor Mpfariseni Mukhuba during a service of the Unity Fellowship Church on the last Sunday of February. She was referring to the brutal killing of 34 mine workers on 16 August 2012 by the police at Marikana in the North West.

The Johannesbu­rg metro police department (JMPD) entourage had just arrived and were preparing to go inside the church to inspect adherence to the Covid-19 regulation­s. According to the video provided by the church, the pastor and congregant­s holding placards went outside the premises and knelt down in the middle of the street and prayed. It showed the police force their way inside. Shots were fired, people were injured and a camera was allegedly confiscate­d.

The pastor and some church members were arrested and taken to the Moroka police station. They were released on bail before midnight.

A statement from the JMPD said that “on their arrival, the officers were surrounded by a group of aggressive male churchgoer­s who thumped onto the JMPD patrol vehicles. Officers used pepper fog to disperse the group and called for backup.”

The JMPD confirmed that Mukhuba was charged with malicious damage to property, assault and contraveni­ng regulation­s of the Disaster Management Act

The church is in an industrial area in Midway, Soweto, and has residentia­l houses on its buffer zone. Since its inception in 2010, residents have complained about the noise from the church.

“Officers have been constantly attending to noise complaints received from the surroundin­g community about the church. Since the national state of disaster was announced by President Cyril Ramaphosa and Disaster Management Act regulation­s were introduced, officers have also attended to complaints of noncomplia­nce gatherings regulation­s,” said the JMPD’S Xolani Fihla.

The pastor’s husband, Professor Theophilus Mukhuba, accuses the City of Johannesbu­rg of being disingenuo­us in allowing them to buy the land and approving their developmen­t plans and then adopting a resolution to terminate the consent.

“The City of Jo’burg are [sic] the engineers of this problem and instead of solving it, they use their power to effect bullying tactics against the church on the problem that they created,” he said.

During the pastor’s appearance in the Protea magistrate’s court earlier in March, Kunene Street was bustling more than usual with vehicles battling to navigate their way out of the swelling crowd that had gathered to support Mukhuba.

“This is not just an attack on Pastor Mukhuba, it’s an attack on Christiani­ty. If you look at the manner at which the ANC government has dealt with the churches, it has

always been unfair even before Covid-19,” Theophilus Mukhuba told the media outside the court.

He complained that the government allowed taxis to operate at full capacity and that people frequent shopping malls but churchgoer­s were not allowed to worship on Sundays because they are classified as super-spreaders of the virus.

“It’s time now the churches must arise. It’s no longer a political struggle that we are fighting. We are fighting for a moral regenerati­on agenda,” Theophilus Mukhuba said.

The speeches continued and after a while Pastor Mukhuba emerged from a black 4x4 Mercedes-benz wearing a long, white, flowing gown and a white face mask.

The crowd jumped for joy and the singing became louder. With her husband by her side and some men holding umbrellas shielding both from the sun, they walked inside the court.

The crowd never stopped chanting and dancing despite the heat. Once court proceeding­s were done the

church leaders emerged to address the supporters under a small tree that gave them enough shade.

Pastor Mukhuba lambasted the JMPD, saying that their treatment of them was brutal.

“I am an adult and I have never seen in the history of the Johannesbu­rg metro police that they have ever discharged so much ammunition anywhere else. The devil is afraid of the churches in South Africa. There is no one who will stop the church.”

The following Sunday morning the church service was back and Pastor Mukhuba’s sermon did not disappoint those gathered as they vigorously clapped and sang.

The JMPD denied that it used brutal force against any church member and that officers only responded to complaints received. The case was postponed to 23 April.

The M&G requested comment from the City of Johannesbu­rg, but it had not responded by the time of going to print.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? Photos: Oupa Nkosi ?? ‘No one will stop the church’: Unity Fellowship Church congregant­s protest outside the Protea magistrate’s court (top). Pastor Mpfariseni Mukhuba (above left), addressed the congregati­on outside the court after she and her husband, Theophilus Makhuba (above right, under umbrella) emerged from the building. The church, advertisin­g it’s presence on a truck (left), is in Midway, Soweto.
Photos: Oupa Nkosi ‘No one will stop the church’: Unity Fellowship Church congregant­s protest outside the Protea magistrate’s court (top). Pastor Mpfariseni Mukhuba (above left), addressed the congregati­on outside the court after she and her husband, Theophilus Makhuba (above right, under umbrella) emerged from the building. The church, advertisin­g it’s presence on a truck (left), is in Midway, Soweto.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa