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Four Kenyans, Told Their Work On Earth Was Done, Fast To Death, Police Say

maximus otter

Recovering policeman
Joined
Aug 9, 2001
Messages
15,144
Fifteen "radicalised" Kenyan Christians were rescued on Friday from a fast which began after they were told they were going to meet their maker, but four died during the rescue mission, police said.

All 15 were members of the Good News International Church in the coastal county of Kilifi, police said.

Police were investigating reports of more victims, they said in the report.

They blamed the extreme fasting on a church member who was arrested last month and later released in connection with the deaths of two boys in the same area. They named him as Makenzie Nthenge.

It was not immediately clear if Nthenge had been rearrested.

https://www.reuters.com/world/afric...th-was-done-fast-death-police-say-2023-04-14/

maximus otter
 
He's back in the clink.

A controversial Kenyan preacher linked to the deaths of four people from starvation after following radical religious teachings has been arrested.

Makenzie Nthenge is alleged to be behind a religious cult in the coastal Kilifi region, in which his followers had reportedly been willing to fast to death after being convinced it was a shortcut to meet Jesus.

Eleven seriously ill people linked to the controversial Good News International Church are recovering in hospital after being rescued from a village hideout.

Some had reportedly gone for as long as 21 days without food.

https://www.bbc.com/news/live/world...3ac3d2bb343d77c498fce8&pinned_post_type=share
 
21 bodies unearthed.

Kenyan police have exhumed 21 bodies near the coastal town of Malindi, as they investigate a preacher said to have told followers to starve to death.

Dead children were among those exhumed, and police said they expected to find even more bodies. The shallow graves are in Shakahola forest, where 15 members of the Good News International Church were rescued last week.

Preacher Paul Mackenzie Nthenge is in custody, pending a court appearance. State broadcaster KBC described him as a "cult leader", and reported that 58 graves have so far been identified. One of the graves is believed to contain the bodies of five members of the same family - three children and their parents.

Mr Mackenzie has denied wrongdoing, but has been refused bail. He insists that he shut down his church in 2019. He allegedly told followers to starve themselves in order to "meet Jesus".

The Kenyan daily The Standard said pathologists will take DNA samples and conduct tests to determine whether the victims died of starvation.
Police arrested Mr Mackenzie on 15 April after discovering the bodies of four people suspected of having starved themselves to death.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-65363585
 
Death toll rises to 58.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/4/24/death-toll-in-kenyan-starvation-cult-rises-to-58-police
-----------------------------------
Kenyan police have recovered 58 bodies, mostly from mass graves in a forest in eastern Kenya, thought to be followers of a Christian cult who believed they would go to heaven if they starved themselves, the country’s police chief said on Monday.

The death toll, which has repeatedly risen as exhumations have been carried out, could rise further. The Kenyan Red Cross said 112 people have been reported missing to a tracing and counselling desk it has set up at a local hospital.
 
Update.

Kenya starvation cult: The unbearable stench of mass graves​

    • Published 1 hour ago

Kenyan homicide detectives and forensic experts from the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) examine exhumed bodies from several shallow mass graves
IMAGE SOURCE ,EPA Image caption, Detectives and forensic experts began examining the site on Friday

In the middle of a forest not far from Kenya's coast, piles of fresh earth topped with crucifixes await the attention of forensic experts.

About 14 mass graves have so far been dug up and Hussein Khalid has spent the past four days watching people exhume dozens of bodies.

"The stench is unbearable," he tells the BBC.

The dead are thought to have been members of the Good News International Church. It is believed they were persuaded to starve themselves in order to reach heaven before what they were told was going to be the end of the world.

Mr Khalid runs the rights organisation Haki Africa, which took the authorities to the grave sites at the end of last week after being tipped off by some locals. The place is "quite hidden" inside Shakahola forest and he says that he and his team needed to cut back shrubs and bushes in order to drive there. Eighty-nine bodies have been exhumed so far, but the final count could be much higher as the Red Cross has said that said 112 people have been reported missing. Mr Khalid estimates that there are around 60 mass grave sites in the area and only a quarter of those have been examined.

Police say that 29 survivors have been found so far, but it seems that not all of them wanted to be rescued, so convinced they were about what they were told about the end of the world.

On Sunday, Mr Khalid came across a woman in her late 20s "looking extremely frail" with sunken eyes. But she did not want to be helped.

"When we tried to administer first aid to give her sips of water with glucose with a spoon, she completely refused. She sealed her mouth shut and she was signifying that she doesn't want any help," Mr Khalid says, adding that the woman was now being treated in hospital.

He also came across a man in his 40s who was able to talk.

"He said he didn't need any saving, and that he was in his senses and he knows what he's doing and he should be left alone. He even called us enemies of him going to heaven."

That man has also been taken to hospital.

Victor Kaudo from the Malindi Community Human Rights Centre, which is helping exhume the bodies, says he thinks there are about 150 bodies. He said his organisation had been contacted by a whistleblower who wanted help rescuing his three children.

"It was quite unfortunate because we only rescued one whom we found in a house, tied with a rope," he told the BBC. "And this kid we believe to be six years of age. But his sister and brother were already dead and they had been buried the previous day before we got there."

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-65374093
 
Vid at link.

Kenya starvation cult explained in 60 seconds​

Kenya has been gripped by the story of cult death as detectives continue to dig up mass graves. The dead are thought to have been members of the Good News International Church. It is believed they were persuaded to starve themselves in order to reach heaven before what they were told was going to be the end of the world.

https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-africa-65393674
 
Background piece on the sermons.

Pastor Paul Mackenzie: What did the starvation cult leader preach?​


The leader of a Christian cult in Kenya is due to appear in court next week, as the exhumation of bodies found in mass graves on his land continues. At least 90 have been discovered so far.

Pastor Paul Nthenge Mackenzie has said he closed down his Good News International Church four years ago after nearly two decades of operation.

But the BBC has uncovered hundreds of his sermons still available online, some of which appear to have been recorded after this date.
What picture do they paint of a man whose followers have starved themselves to death?

'Let no-one turn back'​

In a passionate, raspy voice, Pastor Mackenzie delivers his sermons to large congregations in thrall to his apocalyptic themes.

"We are about to win the battle… let no-one turn back… the journey is about to be accomplished," reads a banner across the screen.
One series of videos on his church's YouTube channel has the caption: "End Time Kids" and shows groups of young children delivering messages to the camera.

Others culminate in exorcisms in which followers - often women - writhe around on the ground while he "torments" the demonic forces within them.

These YouTube channels have thousands of subscribers and a Facebook page set up by his church links to many of the videos.

It's not clear when the sermons were filmed, but there is reference to an upcoming preaching event by Pastor Mackenzie in Nairobi in January 2020, which contradicts his claim to have ended his preaching activities the previous year.

'Children are crying because they are hungry, let them die'​

Former members of the church have claimed that they were forced to fast as part of their adherence to its teachings.

There is no direct evidence in the dozens videos we've seen of Pastor Mackenzie directly ordering people to fast, but there are many references to followers sacrificing what they hold dear, including their lives.

"There are people who don't even want to preach [about] Jesus. They say their children are crying because they are hungry, let them die. Is there a problem there?"

In an interview with the Kenyan Nation newspaper a few weeks ago, Pastor Mackenzie denied he forced his followers to fast.

"Is there a house maybe or an enclosure or a fence somewhere that has been found [at the farm] where people might have been locked in?" he replied when the reporter asked him about this. ...

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-65412822
 
Another murderous minister arrested.

POLICE IN KENYA have arrested another popular pastor on the Indian Ocean coast as the number of deaths linked to a cult in the area rose to 103.

Ezekiel Odero “is being processed to face criminal charges related to mass killing of his followers”, according to a statement by interior minister Kithure Kindiki.

Odero will be questioned overnight and is expected to appear in court tomorrow.

His church has been closed and those who were found inside were ordered out, officials said.

Odero’s megachurch, the New Life Prayer Centre Church, is in Malindi County, where another pastor, Paul Mackenzie is being investigated for directing his followers to fast until death.

Police have been exhuming bodies at a ranch owned by Mackenzie, where he moved in 2019 after closing his church in Malindi. As part of the move, he reportedly sold his TV channel to Odero.

Odero’s channel is popular in Kenyan households, with people travelling from across the country to visit his church.

His YouTube channel has more than 400,000 subscribers and 70 million views.

https://www.thejournal.ie/pastor-arrested-kenya-starvation-cult-deaths-rise-6054869-Apr2023/
 
Another murderous minister arrested.

POLICE IN KENYA have arrested another popular pastor on the Indian Ocean coast as the number of deaths linked to a cult in the area rose to 103.

Ezekiel Odero “is being processed to face criminal charges related to mass killing of his followers”, according to a statement by interior minister Kithure Kindiki.

Odero will be questioned overnight and is expected to appear in court tomorrow.

His church has been closed and those who were found inside were ordered out, officials said.

Odero’s megachurch, the New Life Prayer Centre Church, is in Malindi County, where another pastor, Paul Mackenzie is being investigated for directing his followers to fast until death.

Police have been exhuming bodies at a ranch owned by Mackenzie, where he moved in 2019 after closing his church in Malindi. As part of the move, he reportedly sold his TV channel to Odero.

Odero’s channel is popular in Kenyan households, with people travelling from across the country to visit his church.

His YouTube channel has more than 400,000 subscribers and 70 million views.

https://www.thejournal.ie/pastor-arrested-kenya-starvation-cult-deaths-rise-6054869-Apr2023/

:headbang:

maximus otter
 
Update.

Kenya starvation cult: 'My wife and six children followed Pastor Mackenzie'​


Kenyan preacher Paul Nthenge Mackenzie has appeared in court following the discovery of scores of bodies in a remote forest. He is accused of encouraging followers to starve themselves to death - hundreds of relatives are now wondering what happened to their loved ones.
Short presentational grey line

When the leader of the Good News International Church, Pastor Mackenzie, said the world would end in June 2023, Stephen Mwiti's wife believed him. Now, he is certain that she starved to death along with their six children. The 45-year-old, who makes his living selling mandazi, or fried bread, holds up a crumpled photograph of his wife and four of his children asking if anyone has seen them. He has been doing this over and over again in the town of Malindi, south-east Kenya, since she disappeared from there last August. Mr Mwiti has also been to look for them in the Shakahola forest, where members of Pastor Mackenzie's church had isolated themselves.

His wife, Bahati Joan, was pregnant when she left last year with their children: Hellen Karimi, nine years old, Samuel Kirimil, seven, Jacob Kimathi, three, Lillian Gatumbi, 18 months, and Angelina Gatumbi, seven months. Mr Mwiti later found out that his wife had given birth to a son, who also died. She had been an ardent follower of Pastor Mackenzie since 2015 and had first gone to Shakahola in 2021, and then kept coming and going.

After alerting the police numerous times and failed personal attempts to rescue them, he learned recently from other children who had escaped and were being held by Kenyan police, that his own children had died.

"They could identify them from the pictures. They knew their names and where Jacob and Lillian had been buried," he recounts, fighting back tears. "I was told not to try to look for my children again. They were all dead. I was too late."

He believes they were buried in the forest but their bodies have not yet been identified. ...

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-65423645
 
More disturbing news regarding the cult/

Autopsies on corpses found in mass graves linked to a religious cult in Kenya have revealed missing organs and raised suspicions of forced harvesting, investigators said, with a fresh round of exhumations to resume on Tuesday.

The discovery of mass graves last month near the Indian Ocean coastal town of Malindi has stunned the deeply religious Christian-majority country in what has been called the “Shakahola forest massacre”.

Police believe most of the bodies belong to followers of the self-styled pastor Paul Nthenge Mackenzie, who is accused of ordering them to starve to death “to meet Jesus”.

While starvation appears to be the main cause of death, some of the victims – including children – were strangled, beaten or suffocated, according to the chief government pathologist, Dr Johansen Oduor. ...

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/may/09/autopsies-missing-organs-kenya-cult-deaths-police
 
It gets worse.

Children were targeted as the first to be starved to death in the final days of a Christian doomsday cult in Kenya, according to fresh accounts emerging.

Police investigating an apparent mass suicide have so far exhumed 201 bodies in a forest in the nation's southeast.

A former deputy preacher of the cult told the New York Times that children were killed first, ordered "to fast in the sun so they would die faster."

Women and men were next to follow the suicide plan, Titus Katana said.

Mr Katana - who is helping police with the investigation - also described to the Sunday Times the alleged brutal treatment of the children, saying they were shut in huts for five days without food or water.

"Then they wrapped them in blankets and buried them, even the ones still breathing," he was quoted as saying.

It is alleged that the cult followers were told they would reach heaven faster if they starved to death.

Official autopsies of some of the bodies in the expansive Shakahola farm, near the coastal town of Malindi, found signs of starvation, suffocation and beatings.

More than 600 people who are reported to be members of the doomsday cult allegedly led by Pastor Paul Mackenzie are still missing.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-65588273
 
And yet the pastor was still eating and alive. Didn't anyone question that? :dunno:
 
Is there a translation available for those who don't speak meme?

"...those subverted can scream in an eerie high-pitched alien voice, which is apparently used to alert other pod people of humans in their midst.

This version...ends with the pod people taking over almost everyone on Earth. The movie shows several ships with pods to be sent out into other parts of the planet. In the closing scene, Veronica Cartwright's character is happy to see the hero, played by Donald Sutherland, only to hear him emit the alien scream
..."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pod_P...s)#Invasion_of_the_Body_Snatchers_(1978_film)

maximus otter
 
Death toll continues to rise.

The death toll in an investigation linked to a Kenyan cult that practiced starvation to "meet Jesus Christ" has surpassed 300 after 19 new bodies were found Tuesday, a senior official said. Police believe most of the bodies found in a forest near the Indian Ocean town of Malindi belong to followers of Paul Nthenge Mackenzie, a taxi driver-turned-preacher who has been in police custody since April 14.

He is due to face charges of "terrorism" in the case which has rocked the East African nation.

"The death toll has now risen to 303 after the 19 bodies were exhumed," regional commissioner Rhoda Onyancha said.

The toll remains provisional, and the authorities in the East African country fear the true number of dead could be much higher. The search for mass graves is still underway in the Shakahola forest, where the first victims -- some dead, others alive but weakened and emaciated -- were discovered on April 13.

Since then, the series of grim discoveries have revealed a macabre scandal, dubbed the "Shakahola forest massacre". More than 600 people have been reported missing by concerned relatives.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/kenya-doomsday-cult-19-new-bodies-death-toll-more-than-300/
 
update.

Kenyan cult leader Paul Mackenzie has been handed the longest pre-charge court-approved detention in the country's history, following an extension of his stay in prison, a judge has said.

Mr Mackenzie has already been in custody for more than three months. On Thursday, the court allowed the state to detain him and his suspected accomplices for 47 more days.

Delivering his ruling at a court in the coastal Mombasa city, magistrate Yusuf Shikanda explained that the drastic decision was necessitated by the complex and unique nature of the case.

“This has to be the longest pre-charge detention sanctioned by the court in the history of Kenya,” he said.

He added: “The Shakahola saga is one of a kind. It has caused great social panic both nationally and internationally”.

Mr Mackenzie has been in detention on suspicion of leading a starvation cult that killed 427 of his church members.

However, the death toll is expected to rise as the Kenyan government continues the exhumation of bodies from the coastal Shakahola Forest, which served as the cult’s hideout.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world?ns_m...d5d4d347bc945c1788bca0&pinned_post_type=share
 
Guilty of rather mundane crimes.

Paul Mackenzie, the Kenyan man accused of leading a cult and being responsible for the deaths of more than 400 people, has been found guilty on separate charges.

A court in the coastal town of Malindi convicted him of illegally operating a film studio associated with his preaching and distributing films without a valid filming licence.

Some of his sermons are still available online.

The magistrate, however, acquitted him of the offence of inciting children against attending school.

Mackenzie could face imprisonment of up to five years or pay a fine. Sentencing has been scheduled for next month.

Mackenzie has not been formally charged in relation to the death of hundreds of his alleged followers, despite being in custody since April.

The discovery of the bodies in shallow graves in a forest shocked Kenya earlier in the year.

https://www.bbc.com/news/live/world...4e429225a3f5372828545a&pinned_post_type=share
 
He could get out on bail.

A Kenyan court has warned prosecutors it will release under its own terms a pastor and others accused of being behind the deaths of 429 people believed to be his cult followers if they are not charged within two weeks.

For months since the arrests last April, prosecutors have asked the court for permission to keep holding Paul Mackenzie and 28 others while they look into the case that shocked Kenyans with the discovery of mass graves and allegations of starvation and strangulation.

Shanzu Senior Principal Magistrate Yusuf Shikanda noted that the suspects had been detained for 117 days since the last application for an extension and it was enough time to have completed investigations.

The defence has argued that the constitutional rights for bail for Mackenzie and the others were being violated since they have not been charged.

https://www.breakingnews.ie/world/k...day-cult-leader-within-two-weeks-1573462.html
 
He could get out on bail.

A Kenyan court has warned prosecutors it will release under its own terms a pastor and others accused of being behind the deaths of 429 people believed to be his cult followers if they are not charged within two weeks.

For months since the arrests last April, prosecutors have asked the court for permission to keep holding Paul Mackenzie and 28 others while they look into the case that shocked Kenyans with the discovery of mass graves and allegations of starvation and strangulation.

Shanzu Senior Principal Magistrate Yusuf Shikanda noted that the suspects had been detained for 117 days since the last application for an extension and it was enough time to have completed investigations.

The defence has argued that the constitutional rights for bail for Mackenzie and the others were being violated since they have not been charged.

https://www.breakingnews.ie/world/k...day-cult-leader-within-two-weeks-1573462.html

Update.

A suspected Kenyan cult leader is to be charged with murder and terrorism over the deaths of more than 400 people found in mass graves, prosecutors say.

Paul Mackenzie was arrested in April after the discovery of hundreds of bodies, some of whom were said to have starved themselves to death. Kenyan prosecutors say that he and 94 others will be charged in court in Malindi on Wednesday. The self-proclaimed pastor has denied responsibility for the deaths.

The bodies of 429 people, including children, have been dug up from grave sites in Shakahola, a remote forest about two hours' drive west of Malindi. Most showed signs of starvation, but some - children among them - may have been assaulted. Mr Mackenzie is alleged to have encouraged members of his Good News International Church to move there and prepare for the end of the world.

One witness told the BBC that people were given instructions in January last year to begin fasting so that they could "get to heaven".

But Mr Mackenzie has said the deaths could not be down to him as he closed his church in 2019.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-67992038
 
Is he the full Kshilling?

A cult leader arrested in Kenya over 400 deaths must undergo mental health checks before being charged, a judge has said.

Paul Mackenzie was detained in April last year after hundreds of bodies were found in mass graves. Most showed signs of starvation, but some - children among them - may have been assaulted.

MacKenzie, a self-proclaimed pastor accused of leading a doomsday cult, has denied responsibility for the deaths.

Prosecutors have said they will charge him and 94 others with murder, manslaughter, terrorism and torture.

But on Wednesday, they asked a court in the coastal town of Malindi for more time in order to determine if MacKenzie and 30 other suspects are mentally fit to stand trial.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-68005997
 
Mackenzie has been charged with mass murder.

A Kenyan court has charged the leader of a starvation cult and dozens of suspected accomplices with murdering nearly 200 children in a forest near the Indian Ocean.

Self-proclaimed pastor Paul Nthenge Mackenzie, who has already been charged with terrorism, manslaughter as well as child torture and cruelty, is alleged to have incited hundreds of his acolytes to starve to death in order to "meet Jesus".

Mr Mackenzie and 29 other suspects pleaded not guilty to 191 counts of murder, including of three infants, according to court documents seen by AFP.

A thirty-first suspect was deemed to lack the mental fitness to stand trial and ordered to return to the Malindi High Court in a month's time.

The cult leader has pleaded not guilty to all the charges against him.

https://www.rte.ie/news/world/2024/0206/1430770-kenya-cult/
 
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