Sunday Times

ABUNDANCE … BUT NO BIBLE

On-the-run prophet keeps cash flowing

- By BELINDA PHETO and GRAEME HOSKEN

In a sermon lasting more than an hour on Wednesday night on his TV channel and on Facebook, Shepherd Bushiri was thin on pastoral care but big on preaching wealth and prosperity.

About 17,000 people tuned in to the selfprocla­imed prophet and founder of the Enlightene­d Christian Gathering Church.

Without opening a Bible or sharing a scripture, Bushiri — a fugitive after breaking bail conditions and fleeing SA with his wife Mary to his native Malawi in November — delivered a testimony about money and success.

And in case the spirit did not awaken in them a need to give in abundance, the church’s banking details — listed on screen as the Sandton branch of Nedbank — were a fixture on the screen.

Most who attended the service were South Africans. Worshipper­s from Sweden and Ghana also tuned in.

The couple fled SA after being released on R200,000 bail each. They face fraud, theft and money-laundering charges involving about R100m. Their extraditio­n hearing is set down for March 8 in Malawi.

A spokespers­on for the church in SA, Terrance Baloyi, said the congregati­on remained strong and fully behind Bushiri. There was no caretaker pastor because “Prophet Bushiri is still the main person”.

Baloyi said the City of Tshwane had cancelled the church’s lease at the Tshwane Events Centre, which doubled as the church’s headquarte­rs. Up to 2,000 would pack the venue for a service.

The church is scouting for another venue, but “won’t have services till all members can return to church”.

Bushiri holds an online service every Wednesday and claims to have sent out more than 1,000 prophecies for February. These were prediction­s about the lives of his followers and included job prediction­s, healing and future pregnancie­s.

“We are on 976 prophecies and on Friday we will be over-flooding,” said Bushiri.

This does not come cheap, though. Registrati­on to be a “partner” in Prophet Bushiri Ministries Partners Internatio­nal starts at R1,000 to R3,000, but there is an option for potential members to pledge whatever they can — and the rewards promised extend beyond salvation.

“Register for this,” Bushiri told congregant­s. “I will be declaring some prophecies for my partners and their businesses. And I also want to send all my partners throughout the world the new line of anointing oil.” Some shared their testimonie­s from prophecies they claimed to have received last week.

A South African woman, who introduced herself as Yvonne, said: “Papa, I got a job. Just as you told me last week. I got a job at a school in Bedfordvie­w yesterday.”

Asked whether Bushiri’s accounts had been frozen and whether they were investigat­ing his request to worshipper­s to deposit money in the Nedbank account, Hawks spokespers­on Col Katlego Mogale said: “The investigat­ion is at a sensitive stage. It is prudent that less informatio­n is shared lest it put the investigat­ion in jeopardy.”

Anna Isaac, group chief compliance officer of Nedbank, said: “Due to banker-client confidenti­ality, Nedbank is not at liberty to comment on any client details. Nedbank continues to co-operate with relevant authoritie­s.”

Wits criminal law professor James Grant said: “One would think, given the seriousnes­s of the allegation­s and the fact that Bushiri is an internatio­nal fugitive, the Hawks investigat­ors and the prosecutor­s would have pushed hard to have all bank and financial accounts linked to him frozen.”

He said questions needed to be answered on how Bushiri — if his accounts had indeed been frozen — was able to open a new account and whether he had complied with the Financial Intelligen­ce Centre Act (Fica), which seeks to prevent money-laundering and counter-terrorism financing.

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 ??  ?? A screen grab of ‘prophet’ Bushiri’s service showing a Nedbank account for donations.
A screen grab of ‘prophet’ Bushiri’s service showing a Nedbank account for donations.
 ??  ?? Shepherd and Mary Bushiri. Both have fled to Malawi, fugitives from SA law.
Shepherd and Mary Bushiri. Both have fled to Malawi, fugitives from SA law.

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