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Botswana shuts ‘miracle’ pastor Shepherd Bushiri’s church

January 11, 2018

[caption id="attachment_42869" align="alignleft" width="1000"]Shepherd Bushiri Shepherd Bushiri[/caption]

Botswana has shut down the church of a controversial Malawian self-styled prophet, who claimed to walk on air.

The government confirmed the closure of Shepherd Bushiri's Enlightened Christian Gathering Church (ECG) in Gaborone, reportedly due to concerns over so-called "miracle money". Malawi24 reports that the church has appealed against the decision, taken less than a year after he was in effect banned from entering the country. He had been due to attend a conference. However, Botswana minister Edwin Batshu announced in April 2017 that Mr Bushiri - who now lives in South Africa - would need a visa to enter, despite Malawians not usually needing one, according to AllAfrica.com.   https://youtu.be/T1JQY8_Uj_0

Who is Shepherd Bushiri?

  • Malawi-born "prophet" who now runs churches from Ghana to South Africa
  • Claims to have cured people of HIV and brought people back from the dead, South Africa's Mail & Guardian says
  • Predicted the UK would split, "states" would fight and it would descend into "chaos", the Maravi Post said in a report
  • Appeared to walk on air in a video shared widely on social media
  • Told Zimbabwe politician Kembo Mohadi he would get "the crown" before he was named vice-president, according to New Zimbabwe
Presentational grey line
The government has now announced that the church will be shut for good, with the Botswana Gazette obtaining a letter informing management the "registration" had been cancelled. The newspaper further reports it was the church's use of "miracle money" - promises of money appearing as if by magic - which broke the country's laws. Mr Bushiri - who has more than 2.3 million likes on Facebook and filled Johannesburg's FNB Stadium on New Year's Eve - and his church have yet to respond publicly. The church leader is known as much for his lavish lifestyle as for his successful ministry, which stretches across Africa. He came under fire last year after it emerged he was charging between 1,000 and 25,000 rand ($80-2,000; £60-1,500) to attend a gala dinner with him, South Africa's News24 reported. *BBC

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